5. Baldwin-Steele (10.8 Baldwin-Steele)

Newton Bascum Baldwin and Martha Ellen Steele

Table 5   N. Bascum and M. Ellen (Steele) Baldwin family
Table Name Birth Death Age Born Died Buried Vocation
T10 0 Newton Bascum Baldwin 24 Dec 1862 22 Mar 1919 56 Virginia St. Maries ID Woodlawn Cem ID Restaurateur
T11 0 Martha Ellen (Steele) 14 Oct 1863 27 Apr 1943 79 Jackson KY St. Maries ID Woodlawn Cem ID Wife
1 Sarah Elizabeth (Williams) 27 Mar 1883 29 Jan 1964 80 Kentucky Coeur d'Alene ID Coeur d'Alene ID Nurse
2 Lydia Margaret (Anstine) 1 Apr 1886 31 Aug 1929 44 Annville Jackson KY Seward Co NE Utica NE Farm wife
3 Almeda Jane (Ure) 12 Dec 1888 Nov 1971 82 Kentucky Spokane WA Woodlawn Cem ID Milliner
4 Ida Mae (Wetherall) c Mar 1890 2 Apr 1923 32/33 Corbin KY Orofino ID Woodlawn Cem ID Stenographer
Baldwin-Steele marriage certificate Marriage Register showing union of "Newton B. Baldwin" and "Martha E. Steel" [sic = Martha E. Steele]
as witnessed by relatives and friends, Jackson County, Kentucy, 15 December 1881
Copped, cropped, and composed from Ancestry.com
Baldwin-Steele marriage bond Marriage Bond for "Newton Baldwin" and "M. D. Settle"
also spelled "Martha E. Steel" [sic = Martha E. Steele]
McKee, Jackson County, Kentucy, 5 December 1881
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Baldwin-Steele portrait Baldwin-Steele family about 1905
Probably before leaving Kentucky, possibly after arriving in Iowa
Baldwin sisters Almeda Jane Ure (3rd), Ida Mae Wetherall (4th),
Sada Elizabeth Williams (1st), Lydia Margaret Anstine (2nd)
Parents Newton Bascum Baldwin (Baldwin-Howard), Martha Ellen Steele (Steele-Grubb)
Scan by Patricia Flint of original photo in her family collection
(Patricia is a great-great-granddaughter of Ellen Steele and
a great-granddaughter of Ellen's 2nd daughter Meda Baldwin)
  1. Newton B. Baldwin and Martha E. Steele were "bonded" in marriage on 5 December in McKee, Jackston County, Kentucky, and registered the marriage in Jackston County, Kentucky on 15 December 1881. The registration record states that the marriage took place "at the residence of the bride's father" but Ellen Steele's father Jonas Steele died in 1868. "Father" appears to be an error for "brother", most likely "William D. Steele", the first listed witness, followed by his younger brother "John Steele" and others, ending with Newton's older brother "Wm. Baldwin". The "marriage bond" includes spelling errors like "Steel" for "Steele" and "Neuton" for "Newton" among several others.
    Following Bascum's death in 1919, Ellen lived for a while with her daughter and son-in-law Meda and Clifford Ure in St. Maries (1920 census), and later with her daughter Lydia Anstine's family in Nebraska, where she continued to live for a while after Lydia's death in 1929 (1930 census).
  2. Sarah Elizabeth was "Sada" in my father's memory, though she was usually "Sadie" or "Sadie E.". My father called her "Aunt Sadie" and that is how I and my brother and sister also knew her. A transcription of a 1940 Social Security record shows "Sadie Baldwin Williams" but she was usually "Sadie E. Williams". She married Charles F. Williams (or Ambrose Powell Williams) around 1903 (or 1902). Apparently they had 4 children, of whom 2 -- Faye and Claude -- survived (1910 census).
    Faye M. Williams was born in Iowa on 4 October 1906 and died in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho on 25 November 1995. Claude J. Williams was born in Nebraska on 28 November 1907 and died on 25 November 1977. They and their mother were living with the Baldwin's in St. Maries in 1910 according to that year's census. The Baldwins were living in Spokane in 1908 and 1909.
    Sadie is buried at Coeur d'Alene Memorial Gardens in Coeur d'Alene, Kootenai County, Idaho.
  3. Lydia or "Lydie" (Liddie) is also reported to have been born on 1 April 1883. The 2 April 1883 date is based on her death certificate. Ida, too, was born on 2 April.
    Lydia married Charles (aka "Charley " and "Chas") Anstine, in Lincoln, Nebraska on 12 February 1908. Charley was a Nebraska farmer she met while the Baldwin family was living in Lincoln (See Table 5.2).
  4. Almeda or "Meda" ("Danny" to some in her family) -- also worked as a telephone operator. She married Clifford Ure, a St. Maries barber, on 15 March 1911. By the 1920 census he was a mailman. She and Clifford or "Cliff" -- like N. Bascum and M. Ellen Baldwin, and like Ida Baldwin Wetherall -- are buried at Woodlawn Cemetery in St. Maries.
  5. Ida's death certificate states she was born in 1888. The 1900 census states March 1891, and the 1920 census states she was then 36, which implies she was born in 1888-1889. Her 1 June 1910 marriage certificate says she was 20 as of her last birthday, which implies she was born in 1890, and her tombstone says 1890.
    Ida married William Riley Wetherall in Seward, Nebraska, on 1 June 1910. Their wedding portrait is the work of a Seward photographer. Ida's oldest sister Sada Williams was working at a mental asylum in Seward at the time. Her 2nd older sister Lydia Anstine was living with her family on a farm in nearby Utica. And their mother, Ellen Baldwin, made frequent visits to Nebraska to see her grandchildren.
    The circumstances of Ida's life, after her marriage to William Riley Wetherall in 1910 and the birth of William Bascum (later "Bascom") Wetherall in 1911, were tragic (see below).

See Chronology of Baldwin-Steele family for an overview of the origins of the Baldwin line in the Baldwin-Steele family and a fuller account of the family's movements and life.

See Chronology of Steele-Grubb family for an account of the Steele-Grubb family.

See 4th cousins X removed: Steele-Grubb connections with David Crockett for a look at the possible crossing of paths of the Steele line of the Baldwin-Steele family with an offshoot of the Crockett ancestors of Davy Crockett.

Bosoms trump breasts

Compare the clothing the Baldwin sisters are wearing in the circa 1905 family portrait to the right, and those they are wearing in the circa 1907 portrait below. Sada and Lydia are wearing the same outfits. Ida, too, appears to be wearing the same or very similar blouse and belt. Only Meda's dress is clearly different.

The object of female fashions then -- in the age of virtue and modesty -- seems to have been to exaggerate the bosom rather than accentuate the breasts. A large bosom alludes to fertility and motherhood, while shapely breasts suggest sexuality and womanhood. The body, then, was not only covered -- but layered -- with clothing designed to hide a woman's actual figure -- except her waist, which was cinched as tight as possible.

Top  

N.B. and Ellen (Steele) Baldwin (Grandma Baldwin)

N. Bascum Baldwin -- also known as "N. B. Baldwin" but socially as "Bascum" -- married Martha Ellen Steele in Kentucky. The couple eventually settled and built a home in Saint Maries, at the confluence of the St. Joe and St. Maries Rivers, in Idaho. Bascum was known as a "Dealer In General Merchandise".

William B. Wetherall said in 2010 that his maternal grandparents had married and started their family in Kentucky, but later migrated to Saint Maries. He said his grandfather, N. B. Baldwin, had been a merchant and businessman, and at times owned a restaurant, general store, and laundry.

N. B. Baldwin   In his very small collection of Wetherall-Baldwin family detritus was a yellow business card showing the following information. I transcribed the card when my father showed it to me in a shoebox with other family detritus. The card has been lost.

N. B. Baldwin
Dealer In General Merchandise
St. Maries, Idaho
St. Maries at confluence of St. Joe and St. Maries Rivers

Ellen Ellen (Steele) Baldwin, circa 1940
Probably in St. Maries where Ellen died in 1943
Wetherall Family Collection

Judging from the 1880 census, Bascum and Ellen married in their teens as children in neighboring families in Kentucky. All the men in the families were laborers, presumably on the family farm.

The 1900 census shows them farming in another part of Kentucky with their 4 daughters. The oldest was "Saddy" (17) or "Sally" depending on how one reads the corrected scribble, and the youngest was Ida (9). All 4 of the Baldwin sisters were at school.

Sometime around 1904 or 1905, some of the Baldwin-Steele family members leave Kentucky. N.B. Baldwin appears to be living with Sadie and her husband C. F. Williams in Kansas in 1905 (see 1905 Kansas census below).

By 1907, N.B. and Ellen are resident employees at the insane asylum in Lincoln, Nebraska. He is working as a meat cutter, she as an assistant cook. Lydia was apparently studying at a business college in Lincoln. Meda and Ida were probably also living there. Circa 1906-1907, Lydia married Charles Anstine, a farmer in Utica in Seward County.

By 1908, N.B. and Ellen, and Meda and Ida, had moved to Spokane, Washington, where Ida (and apparently also Meda" attended business colleges, and N.B. and Ellen ran a restaurant. Lydia remained in Nebraska with her new family. In 1909, Meda and Ida are living with their parents in Spokane, Ida still enrolled in a business college, Meda working as a cashier at the restaurant.

By 1910, N.B. and Ellen are running a restaurant and boarding house in St. Maries, Idaho. Meda is living with them while working as a milliner at her own shop.

A photograph probably taken in St. Maries early in 1912, of William B. Wetherall on a boardwalk in St. Maries, shows a restaurant and boarding house that may have belonged to N.B. Baldwin. See Wetherall-Hardman family (Bill and Orene) page for details.

N.B. lived in St. Maries until his death in 1919. The 1920 census shows Ellen living in St. Maries with Meda, Meda's husband Clifford Ure, and their daughter Greta. Lydia underwent surgery for a colostomy in 1927 and died in 1929, and the 1930 census shows Ellen living with Charles Anstine and his and Lydia's daughters on the Anstine farm in Utica. The 1930 census shows Sadie also living and working in Seward. The 1940 census shows Sadie and Ellen living together in St. Maries, where Ellen died in 1943.

So Ellen spent a good part of her life supporting her daughters in their trials and tribulations, both marital and medical. She helped Sadie and her children when Sadie's marriage floundered. She went to Iowa to help Ida deliver William B. Wetherall (my father) in 1911, and then took in my father when Ida was committed to an asylum. She was helped by Meda after N.B. died but reciprocated by helping Meda raise first Greta and later Dale. She helped Lydia in the late 1920s when Lydia had cancer, and remained with Charley and the girls for a while after Lydia died. Her visits with my father in Iowa when he was going to school there during the 1920s inspired him to return to St. Maries, where he lived with Meda's family, but also Ellen and Sadie, during his college years.

Top  

Baldwin sisters Baldwin sisters about 1907
Lydia → Meda → Sadie ↓ Ida
Probably taken in Lincoln, Nebraska
(Wetherall Family photo)

Baldwin sisters

William B. Wetherall's mother and aunts

N.B. and Ellen Baldwin had 4 daughters in the span of 7 years from 1883-1890 -- Sadie, Lydia, Meda, and Ida. As adults they led very different lives, and some had hard times.

Sadie lost the first 2 of her 4 children in death in their infancy, separated from her husband while the 2 surviving children were still very young, and raised them alone with occasional help from her mother.

Lydia lost her 1st daughter, and then shortly after the birth of her 4th, she underwent a resection and colostomy operation. Two years later she died, leaving her husband with three daughters, the youngest only 2 years old -- and three years later he also died of cancer.

Meda would live the longest and most stable life of the Baldwin sisters.

Ida would live the shortest and most tragic life. Confined in an asylum about 8 months after her son, William B. Wetherall, my father, was born, she died in confinement 12 years later, probably a victim of what today would be called post-partum depression. In her time, she was just crazy.

Only Lydia and Meda are buried with their husbands. Lydia and Charley Anstine are buried with their eldest daughter, Velma Anstine, in Utica, Nebraska. Meda and Clifford are buried in the Baldwin plot in St. Maries, Idaho, with N. Bascum and M. Ellen Baldwin. Ida Baldwin Wetherall is also buried in the Baldwin plot with her parents and the Ures. Sadie Williams is Coeur dAlene, Idaho.

Portrait

The portrait to the right was most likely taken in Lincoln, Nebraska, around 1907, which appears to have been the last year the Baldwins and their daughters were living close together. By 1908, N.B. and Ellen, and Ida and apparently also Meda, were in Spokane, while Lydia was in Nebraska, where she had married. Sadie, who married around 1903-1904, had given birth to her Faye -- her 3rd (and 1st surviving) child -- in Iowa in 1906, but Claude -- her 4th (and 2nd surviving) child -- was born in Nebraska in 1907.

The 1910 census shows all the Baldwins except Lydia and Ida -- namely N.B., Ellen, Meda, and Sadie and her 2 children -- living together in St. Maries, Idaho. In 1910, Ida married William R. Wetherall of Iowa in Seward, Nebraska, where Lydia lived, then lived in Iowa, where in 1911 she gave birth to William B. Wetherall. Ellen came to Iowa to be with her when she gave birth, at which time Sadie was in Medical Lake, Washington.

Top  

5.1 Williams-Baldwin

Sadie (Baldwin) Williams (Aunt Sadie)

Table 5.1   Sadie (Baldwin) Williams family
Table Name Birth Death Age Born Died Buried Vocation
0 Ambrose Powell Williams ?
Charles F. Williams ?
c1883
c1877
Tennessee
Tennessee
Railroad flagman
Railroad fireman
T5 0 Sarah Elizabeth (Williams) 27 Mar 1883 29 Jan 1964 80 Kentucky Coeur d'Alene ID CDA Memorial Cem ID Nurse
n Unknown child net 1902 nlt 1904 "Sallie" or "Sally" (Baldwin) Williams appears to have lost two children in infancy before leaving Kentucky by 1905, as there are stories of least one child in a cemetery near where she grew up in Kentucky (see below).
n Unknown child net 1902 nlt 1904
3 Faye Marguerite (Mathews) (Nelson) (Rebenstorf) 4 Oct 1906 25 Nov 1995 88 Knoxville IA Coeur d'Alene ID CDA Memorial Cem ID Teacher, Accountant
4 Claude Jennings Williams 28 Nov 1907 25 Nov 1977 69 Lincoln NE Spokane WA WA State Vets Cem Carpenter

Portrait of Sadie Williams, circa 1920s
Gumbel Studio, Seward, Nebraska
Wetherall Family Collection

Sadie Williams as Nurse

Sadie Williams as nurse (left), circa 1910s-1920s
(Wetherall Family photo)

WBW could not recall where or when this picture was taken
and did not recognize the woman on the right.
He said Sadie had once worked at a home for unwed mothers
and might have been its director.
She was, in fact, the head nurse at such a home
in Seward, Nebraska, according to 1930 census.

Sadie Williams

Sadie Williams
Place and date unknown
(Severns Family photo)

Sadie may have posed for these mugshots at a photo booth
in a Greyhound terminal during one of her trips.

Wanted: Sadie Williams
"Nurse, mother, fearless traveler.
Don't mess with her on a bus.
If you're lucky enough to sit with her, though,
she'll tear off both of your ears with
amazing tales of adventure and survival."

Sadie

Sadie Williams' death certificate
Copped from Ancestry.com

Informant "Mrs. Faye Rebenstorf" was Sadie's daughter
Sadie's father was "N.B." or "N. [Newton] Bascum" or "Bascum"
Her mother was, as stated, "Ellen" or "M. [Martha] Ellen"

Certificate says Sadie was "widowed"
1910 census says "M" (married)
1930 census says "D" (divorced)
1940 census says "Wd" (widowed)

  1. Sarah "Sadie" E. Williams was "Sada" in my father's memory though he and others in the family generally called her "Sadie", the name most commonly found on census and other records. She is "Sally" on the 1900 census, "Sallie" on 1902 marriage record, "Sallie" on a 1905 Kansas census, and "Sarah" (once "Sara) or "Sadie" on most other records.
  2. "Ambrose Powell Williams" -- aka "A.P. Williams" -- is the father-on-record of Sadie's daughter Faye (below). On 19/20 September 2019, Find a Grave contributor Peter Joseph ("PJ") Braun kindly informed me that Sadie Baldwin had married Ambrose Powell Williams, in Jackson County, Kentucky, on 18 October 1902. This was a very valuable piece of information for me, for at the time I had not seen any records of Sadie's marriage, and was unable to substantiate the claim made on a delayed birth certificate in 1942 that Faye's father was Ambrose Powell Williams (below). I later learned that "PJ" was instrumental in discovering the cremains of Sadie's son Claude J. Williams (below), and I realized that he had contacted me after seeing my in the course of investigating Claude's family history through Ancestry.com.
  3. "Charles F. Williams" is the father of Claude Williams accoring to Claude's Lincoln, Nebraska birth certificate. He is also listed as a "railroad fireman" (locomotive engineer) in a contemporary Lincoln directory. He is "C.F. Williams" on the 1905 Kansas census showing him with "N.B. Baldwin", "Sallie Williams", and a boy named "Oscar", who C.F. Williams appears to have brought from a previous marriage.
  4. The identities of Sadie's first two children, possibly twins, are not known. Presumably she bore and lost them between her 1902 marriage and migration to Kansas before the state's 1905 census.
  5. Sadie had lost 2 children according to the 1910 national census, by which time she was in Idaho. The census states that she had been married for 6 years, and she had had 4 children of whom 2 survived, namely Faye and Claude.
  6. Lois McWhorter, a 3rd cousin in Kentucky, reported in 2018 that her mother, Hazel (Baldwin) Gill, had heard that an infant child of Sallie Baldwin was buried in a cemetery associated with Gabbard family property, which might have shared a border with, or once been part of, Baldwin property along today's Baldwin Branch Road south of Annville (see Baldwin-Steele homes below).
  7. Faye married L.J. Mathews in February 1934 and in December a daughter, Marilyn, was born. Faye had divorced by the 1940 census. A marriage certificate filed in Missoula County, Montana on 28 October 1944, records a marriage performed in the town of Missoula on 26 October 1944, pursuant to a license issued the same day, between Wisconsin-born "Howard C. Rebenstorf" and Iowa-born "Faye M. Nelson" (mother Sadie E. Baldwin, father A. P. Williams). Rebenstorf informally adopted Faye's daughter Marilin A. Mathews, but Marilin remained legally Mathews to the day she married Norman K. Disrud (see below). Faye also went by "Faye Marjorie Williams" (apprently on a Social Security document dated December 1936). Faye was "Fay M. [sic] Williams" (single) on the 1910 census for St. Maries, Idaho, and the 1930 census for Lincoln, Nebraska, and "Faye Mathews" (divorced) on the 1940 census for Spokane, Washington.
  8. "Claude Jennings" was usually just "Claude" or "Claude J." Williams. He appears to have never married (according to Darci Severns).

Sadie's husband and children

Sadie's marriage, motherhood, separation, and divorce are shrouded in mystery. She had 4 children, of whom 2 -- Faye and Claude -- survived. Both Faye and Claude were slightly older than Sadie's nephew, this writer's father William Bascom Wetherall, who partly grew up with his aunt and 1st cousins in the Baldwin household in St. Maries until he was about 6 years old. Sadie and her children -- especially Faye -- remained close to Bill and his family throughout their lives.

The 1900 census for Pond Creek in Jackson County shows what looks most like "Sally" (17) [Sarah, Sadie, Sada] living in Kentucky as the oldest daughter of "N.B." or "B." Baldwin (38), who is engaged in farming, and Ellen (36). Her younger sisters -- Liddie [sic = Lydie, Lydia] (14), "Almedie" ["Medie"?] [sic = Medie, Meda] (11), and Ida (9) -- are also listed. The census states that everyone in the family was born in Kentucky, Sadie in March 1883, her father in December 1861. Sadie is single and at school.

18 October 1902   "A.P. Williams" married "Sallie Baldwin" in Jackson County, Kentucky (Ancestry.com record, transcription).

The 1905 Kansas census for Parsons, in Labette County, enumerated on 1 March 1905, shows "N.B. Baldwin" (44), residing in a home with "C.F. Williams" (28), "Sallie Williams" (22), and "Oscar Williams" (6). C.F. Williams and N.B. Baldwin were born in Virginia, and Sallie and Oscar were born in Kentucky. C.F. Williams came to Kansas from Tennessee, while Sallie and Oscar Williams, and N.B. Baldwin, came to Kansas from Kentucky. C.F. Williams is described as a "Hospital attendant".

Who did Sadie Baldwin marry?

Oscar, if 6 as of 1 March 1905 in the Kansas census, would have been born on or after 2 March 1898 and no later than 1 March 1899, when Sallie was 16 and C.F. Williams was 22. In other words, Oscar was born about 1 year before the 1 June 1910 census showing "Saddy" or "Sally" Baldwin as single -- and 3 years before "Sallie Baldwin" is said to have married "A.P. Williams".

The above Ancestry.com record -- a transcription rather than an image -- shows a marriage between a "Sallie Baldwin" and an "A.P. Williams" in Jackson County, Kentucky, on 18 October 1902.

The 1900 census for Kavanaugh Precinct in Jackson County, Kentucky, shows "Ambrose Williams", 22 years of age, born in Mar 1878 in Virginia to Virginia-born parents, with his wife "Margaret" age 28, born in Sept 1871 in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents, and a son "Oscar M." 1, Sept 1898. The household includes 4 other children, all bearing the family name "Powell" -- step-daughter "Maud" 8, June 1891, step-son "Leslie" 6, Dec 1893, step-daughter "Lella" 3, July 1896, and adopted "Ella" 14, Apr 1886. Ambrose and Margaret have been married 3 years, and Margaret has had 4 children, all of whom are reportedly still alive -- presumably Oscar with Ambrose Williams, and the 3 step-children with a man named Powell, implicity Margaret's deceased or divorced previous husband. Ambrose is farming on a farm he rents.

Margaret "Maggie" A. Coyle married Larkin Powell on 29 July 1890 in Jackson County, Kentucky.

"Maud Lee (Powell) Clemmons", born on 27 June 1891, died of tuberculosis on 2 July 1922 in Sand Gap in Jackson County.

Frank Leslie Powell, born on 8 December 1893 in Sand Gap, Jackson County, died in Cincinati, Hamilton County, Ohio, on 19 January 1968.

The identities of "Ambrose Powell Williams" and "Charles F. Williams" remain unclear. It doesn't make immediate sense that in 1902 Sadie (Sallie) married "Ambrose Powell Williams" (A.P. Williams), who may have had a son named Oscar -- then shows up with "C.F. Williams" and a child "Oscar", and her father N.B. Baldwin, in a 1905 census -- then in 1906 gives birth to a daughter whose father appears to be "Ambrose Powell Williams" -- then in 1907 gives birth a son whose father appears to be "Charles F. Williams" -- unless "A.P." and "C.F." Williams are the same men -- or unless they are different men with the same family name, possibly brothers, with whom Sadie had on-and-off relations.

If "Ambrose Williams" the father of "Oscar" and step-father of several Powell children in the 1900 census is the "A.P. Williams" who "Sallie Baldwin" married in 1902 -- and if this "Sallie Baldwin" is the "Sallie" married to "C.F. Williams" in the 1905 Kansas census that includes "Oscar" and "N.B. Baldwin" -- and "Sallie Baldwin" aka "Sallie Williams" is otherwise N.B. Baldwin's daughter "Sadie Baldwin -- then we have to wonder if C.F. Williams and A.P. Williams are the same person, in which case C.F. Williams brought Oscar to his marriage with Sadie Baldwin from his marriage with Margaret (Coyle) Powell.

At this point, nothing can be ruled out. Even if we leave aside the apparently contradictory marriage and census records, we are left with a delayed Iowa birth certificate for Faye stating that her father was "Ambrose Powell Williams", and an actual Nebraska birth certificate for Claude stating that his father was "Charles F. Williams". That "Ambrose Powell Williams" might be right for Faye does not mean that "Charles F. Williams" is wrong for Claude. It is not impossible that Faye and Claude were half-siblings. Both A.P. Williams and C.F. Williams appear to have been born in Virginia. That Sallie and Oscar Williams and N.B. Baldwin came to Kansas from Kentucky, while C.F. Williams came to Kansas from Tennessee, is not a problem if they came to Kansas by different routes from the same place in Kentucky.

1906   Sadie gave birth to Faye on 4 October 1906 in Iowa. Faye's obituary states she was born in Knoxville, Iowa. A delayed birth certificate issued by the Division of Vital Statistics, Iowa State Department of Health, on 23 March 1942, states that she was born in Knoxville, Iowa, on 4 October 1906 to "Ambrose Powell Williams" and "Sarah E. Williams" ("or Sadie" is printed below Sarah).

1907   Sadie gave birth to Claude on 28 November 1907 in Nebraska. Claude's birth certificate states he was born in Lincoln, Nebraska, to "Chas. F. Williams", a [locomotive] fireman, and "Sarah Elizabeth Baldwin".

The 1908 Lincoln Nebraska Directory shows Williams Charles F fireman C B & Q res 720 Q. Williams is apparently a locomotive fireman for the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad. The same directory shows Lydia Baldwin living at the same 720 Q address, which suggests that Sadie and Faye are also living there. Charles Anstine, who Lydia would soon marry, is living practically next door, on the same street, and is also working as a fireman for C B & Q.

The 1909 Lincoln Nebraska Directory shows Williams Charles F fireman C B & Q res 1113 Q. Williams, still working for the railroad, has moved. Lydia Baldwin and Charles Anstine are no longer listed in the directory.

The 1910 census shows Sadie E. Williams (26) living with her Baldwin parents and second younger sister Meda (21) in St. Maries, Idaho, and her children Faye M. Williams (3) and Claude J. Williams (2). The census states that she had been married for 6 years, and had had 4 children, of whom 2 survived. This implies that she had married about 1904 (actually 1902), and that Faye was born in 1906-1907 (actually 1906) and Claude in 1907-1908 (actually 1907). Newton B. was born in Virginia, his father in Tennessee, his mother in Virginia. Ellen was born in Kentucky to parents born in North Carolina, according to this census. Meda and Sadie were born in Kentucky. Faye was born in Iowa, Claude was born in Nebraska, and their father was born in Tennessee -- consistent with the "Tennessee" origins of "C.F. Williams" in the 1905 Kansas census.

Where and when did Sadie lose 2 children?
If Sadie was the "Sallie" in the 1905 Kansas census, and if "Oscar" was her biological child, then presumably he is 1 of the 2 children who were no longer alive in 1910. Faye and Claude, born in 1906 and 1907, are too closely spaced to consider the birth of any children between them. Did Sadie lose a child between 1908 and the 1910 census? Or before the 1905 Kansas census?

1920 census   I have not found Sadie, Faye, or Claude in the 1920 census. However, stories conveyed to me by Darci Severns, a great granddaughter of Lydia Anstaine, Sadie's sister, who lived in Utica in Seward County, Nebraska, suggest that Sadie was working as a nurse in Nebraska around that time.

Stories handed down by Lydia and Charley Anstine's descendants, through their daughters Lennie and Aura, suggest that Sadie, Faye, and Claude were living in Seward, Nebraska in the late 1910s and early 1920s. Darci Severns reports hearing from her grandmother, Lennie, that her (Lennie's) mother's (Lydia's) sister (Sadie) was a nurse and had seen the appendix removed from that her (Lennie's) older sister Velma, who died in 1919 from an infection. This would put Sadie in Seward in 1919, and Faye and Claude, then in their mid teens, would have been with her. See Darci's full account about Velma's death in "Anstine sisters" below.

The 1930 census shows Sadie (46), divorced, born in Kentucky, father in Virginia, mother in Kentucky, residing and working at the Nebraska Industrial House, a home for unwed mothers in "P" township in Seward County, Nebraska, as its resident nurse. She is said to have been 19 when she married, which implies that she married about 1902 (the 1910 census stated that she had been married for 6 years, which implies she married around 1904). Fay [sic = Faye] M. Williams (23), single, born in Iowa, father in Virginia, mother in Kentucky, is a teacher at a school (Temple) in Lincoln, Nebraska. I have not found Claude in the 1930 census.

The 1940 census shows Sadie Williams (57), head, and Ellen Baldwin (76), mother, living together at the Baldwin home in St. Maries. Both are said to be widowed and Kentucky born. The education box shows Sadie with 2 years of college and Ellen with 8 years of grade school. Sadie was living in Spokane, Washington on 1 April 1935, but Ellen was living in the same home. At the time of the 1940 census, Faye Mathews (33), divorced, no children, 2 years of college, born in Iowa, was working as a bookkeeper in Spokane, Washington, and she was living at the same place on 1 April 1935. Claude J. Williams (32), single, 2 years of college, Nebraska born, was working as a carpenter in building construction in Spokane, Washington, and he too was living at the same place in 1935.

Top  

Sadie's old Kentucky home

Uncle Clay's southern hospitality

September, 1947. Ellen Baldwin has joined Bascum Baldwin in Woodlawn Cemetery in St. Maries for nearly five years. Among their 4 daughters, only Sadie Williams, going on 64, and Meda Ure, then 58, survive them.

Sadie's own children have grown up and are approaching middle age. Her daughter Faye, 40, has remarried and her granddaughter, Marilyn, 12, now has a father. The war is over and her son, Claude Williams, 39, still single, is out of the Navy and working.

Sadie has an itch to see her childhood home in Kentucky. And on the way she'll pass through Nebraska and Iowa, where she had given birth to Faye and Claude and lived for a while after leaving Kentucky when she was 20. On her back to Idaho, she'll swing through San Francisco to visit her nephew, William Bascom Wetherall, and his family. Hopefully Meda will come down from Washington to join them.

In Des Moines, Iowa, where William B. Wetherall went to high school, Sadie buys several postcards of city landmarks. She sends 4 cards to "1922 24th Ave / San Francisco 16 / Calif." -- in 2 batches about 10 days apart -- the 1st from Des Moines, the 2nd from Kentucky -- and twice spells Wetherall "Weatherall".

The plot thickens with each card.

"I came 3 days ago and 2 chickens have died"

Southern Hospitality Southern Hospitality
Des Moines, Iowa, 10 Sep 1947, 8:30 PM Annville, KY, 22 Sep 1947, A.M.
Card 1
Des Moines River,
Des Moines, Iowa

W.B. Weatherall
6 pm, Wed, Sept. 10
Dear Bill & Bug & Babies
Have you been over
this bridge Bill?
Just had dinner
here and my bus
will leave at 630
Be in Bloomington Ill
at 1155 tomorrow
     Love Auntie
Card 2
Roosevelt High School,
Des Moines, Iowa

Wm. B. Wetherall
No time to
write more
Card 3
Lincoln High School,
Des Moines, Iowa

W.B. Weatherall
Don't know if these
cards I picked up in
Des Moines will ring
a bell in your memory
or not. Didn't have
time to get them all
out in Des Moines.
I expect to be in
S.F. in two weeks.
Will try to write you
when I leave here.
I wanted Meda to meet
me there but don't know
if she will.
     Love Sadie
Card 4
Iowa State Capitol Building,
Des Moines, Iowa

Mr. & Mrs. W.B. Wetherall
Sunday am
Sept. 21, '47
Just seen a chicken die
and Uncle Clay is in the
sweet potato patch which
means fried chicken and sweet
potatoes for dinner with the
usual hot biscuts.
I came to uncle's three
days ago and two chickens
have died. I don't want a
fuss made over me but
the southern hospitality
of my childhood hasn't
changed. I know I
won't have time to see
all that I want to see.
Haven't seen the old home
place yet but will do that
this week.
     Love Sadie

Top  

Henry Clay Baldwin Henry Clay Baldwin
With laundry, circa 1947-1948
(C.W. Baldwin Family photo)
Henry Clay and Linda Baldwin Henry Clay and Linda Baldwin
With Linda in yard, circa 1947-1948
(C.W. Baldwin Family photo)

C.W. Baldwin, who provided the above scans of photographs in his family collection, is a 3rd cousin of this writer and his siblings. We have crossed paths on Ancestor.com, but have met only through email, in which he related to me the following story behind the photographs (24 January 2014).

The attached pictures were taken around 1947-1948 by my mother during a visit to meet Henry Clay & Linda Baldwin. So it would have been around the time frame that Sadie Williams made her visit. However, I asked my mother if she remembered the name Sadie Williams and she said she did not.

I would guess that Henry Clay and Linda -- with the many children and grandchildren and even great grandchildren they had by that time -- to say nothing of their surviving siblings and cousins, and nephews and nieces -- were busy showing their "southern hospitality" to lots of relatives paying their respects to the grand old former representative and his wife. Barring a massive Kentucky reunion, very few members of the extended and far-flung Baldwin-Howard family would have had an opportunity to meet. And few would not have heard or known much, if anything, about descendants of collateral families.

C.W. Baldwin's great grandfather Henry Clay Baldwin (1867-1950), and my great grandfather Newton Bascum Baldwin (1862-1919), were brothers -- sons of our common great great grandparents, John R. Baldwin (1829–1909) and Margaret Howard (1835–1912) -- who of course knew each other. His paternal grandfather, Dewey Herbert Baldwin (1899-1980), and my paternal grandmother, Ida Mae (Baldwin) Wetherall (1890-1923), were 1st cousins, who probably met as very young children in Pond Creek, Kentucky, before Ida's Baldwin-Steele family headed west around 1904. His father, Orville Richard Baldwin (1925-2000), and my father, William Bascom Wetherall (1911-2013), were 2nd cousins, but they would have had no reason to meet, or even to know of each other's existence.

Uncle Clay

Henry Clay Baldwin (1867-1950)

"Uncle Clay" and his wife Linda would both die three years after Sadie's visit.

Uncle Clay was a younger brother of Sadie's father, N. Bascum Baldwin. Both were sons of John R. Baldwin and Margaret Howard (see 10. Baldwin-Howard below for details).

Clay was born Henry Clay Baldwin on 5 November 1867 in Laurel County, Kentucky. He married Malinda "Linda" ("Lindy", "Lindie") H. Abrams on 14 February 1898 and they had at least 8 children.

Though a farmer all his life, H. Clay Baldwin, like his namesake, was also a politician, and served as a representative in Kentucky's State House of Representative (see the "Baldwin-Howard gallery" below).

H.C. Baldwin, as he was also known, died in Annville, Jackson County, on 7 March 1950, of a heart attack. Linda, who was born on 18 August 1880, died on 16 May 1950, just 10 weeks later, from cancer. Both are buried at Medlock Cemetery in Annville (see 10.11 Henry Clay Baldwin and Malinda Abrams in the "Baldwin-Howard" section for details).

Slaughtering chickens

When I was growing up in San Francisco, most of the food I ate came out of neighborhood grocery stores and butcher shops. In earlier years, milk was delivered to our door in glass bottles. Chickens were bought headless, even feetless, dressed and plucked (thus actually undressed), and eggs came in gray pulp paper cartons. Though San Francisco prides itself on fresh fish, many were sold headless and icy.

If you went to Fisherman's Wharf, the crabs might be moving a bit, and some shellfish might also still be quick, but practically everything else was still and dead. In Chinatown, you saw tanks and cages full of live fish, chickens and ducks, a turtle or two, and other critters, destined for dinner plates in local homes and restaurants. Tourists unfamiliar with Chinese markets might have thought they were in an aquarium or zoo, but local people knew.

I learned how to clean a fish when five or six years old. I went trout fishing with a family in the neighborhood whose daughter was born a day before me in the same hospital. Our mothers had been in neighboring beds in maturnity ward. We fashioned poles from limbs and baited hooks with salmon eggs. I can't recall how much thought I gave to the fact that, to eat a fish, you had to catch it. Lure it, hook it, pull it from the water. Let it suffocate, then behead it and gut it.

About the same age, when visiting my maternal grandparents in Peck, Idaho, I witnessed my grandfather, Owen, kill a chicken. The Hardmans kept a number of hens and roosters in a pen behind their home on a lot that included a small field, barn, and outhouse. Owen cornered a rooster it seems he had named and lopped off its head. I particularly recall helping my grandmother and mother pluck its feathers. They talked while they plucked, and they fussed over the smaller feathers, which didn't come out easily and took a lot of time and patience.

I can't remember eating the chicken or how they cooked it. But I remember frying and eating the eggs we collected in the morning before breakfast. I remember the thrill of finding the eggs, some naturally brown, a few soiled by chicken poop. I never looked at clean, white, sized and sanitized store-bought eggs the same way.

The Hardmans, by then, had no cows. Their milk came directly from the dairy behind the small grocery store at the bottom of the hill, which bottled most of the milk produced on Peck's small farms. Farmers brought their raw milk to the dairy in steel cans, and the milk was run through a cream separator, pasteurizer, and homogenizer. The dairy was operated by the family that owned the store and lived in the adjoining home. They also had butter and ice cream churners.

I always associated eating in Idaho with "real butter" as opposed to the stuff we called "butter" in San Francisco. My mother used real butter only when baking, and on special occasions such as Thanksgiving, when there were usually guests for dinner. Otherwise, "butter" in our family referred to imitation butter. Some American butter producers had objected to the selling of white oleomargarine colored to look like butter, so the United States had passed a law forbidding the selling of yellow margarine. My earlier childhood memories include helping my mother mix the packet of powdered food coloring that came with margarine. During the 1950s, the laws were changed to permit manufacturers to color margarine, and the margarine-butter wars resumed. But no matter how much margarine makers tried to make their products taste like the real thing, "real butter" remained a real treat in the Wetherall-Hardman family.

Bus travel

Sadie made her pilgrimage back to Kentucky in the days when people thought nothing of busing around the country. Greyhound and other lines had thriving stations in all major cities and towns, and numerous stops between. The milk runs, and even some long-distance buses, would stop to pick you up or let you off at unscheduled places along their routes.

From about the 1970s, bus service began to both decline and deteriorate, as more freeways were built and more people owned and drove higher quality automobiles, and as air travel became faster, more convenient, and even cheaper, through airports with long-term parking facilities and rental car agencies. Many Greyhound stations became endangered species in the older parts of large cities, which were left to the poor when those with more means moved to newer urban neighborhoods or the suburbs.

Top  

Sadie's 1947 letter to nephew William B. Wetherall

Kentucky roads, family homes, growing old, being remembered

Sada "Sadie" Elizabeth (Baldwin) Williams (1883-1964) was about 64 in the summer of 1947 when she set out from Idaho to visit her Baldwin and Steele relatives and friends in Kentucky, where she was born and raised, and may have left the grave of a child that didn't survive. The 8-page letter she wrote to the Wetheralls, her nephew and his wife, my parents, on 7 October 1947 -- overviewing the trip she partly described in postcards she sent them en route (see above) -- bears the weight of the 40-plus years that had passed since she left Kentucky, barely in her 20s, no later than 1904 or 1905, on a trek that would take several years, first to Parsons, Kansas, then to Knoxville, Iowa where she bore Faye, then to Lincoln, Nebraska where she bore Claude, then to other localiteis in Nebraska and Washington, and finally -- via St. Maries, Idaho, where Ellen and Meda settled -- to nearby Coeur d'Alene, where Faye and her family settled. Her remarks about the roads and family homes in Kentucky (pages 4-6), and her thoughts about aging and being remembered (pages 6-8), are especially amusing and moving.

Wetherall Family Collection
Click on pages to enlarge

See Baldwin-Steele homes (below) for images of
photographs that may have been enclosed with letter

Sadie's letter
Sadie's letter 1 Sadie's letter 2 Sadie's letter 3 Sadie's letter 4
Sadie's letter 5 Sadie's letter 6 Sadie's letter 7 Sadie's letter 8

Top  

5.2 Anstine-Baldwin

Lydia (Baldwin) Anstine (Aunt Lydie) and Charley Anstine (Uncle Charley)

Table 5.2   Charles and Lydia (Baldwin) Anstine family
Table Name Birth Death Age Born Died Buried Vocation
0 Charles Andrew Anstine 27 Dec 1883 12 Nov 1932 48 Seward Co NE Seward Co NE Utica NE Farmer
T5 0 Lydia Margaret (Baldwin) 2 Apr 1886 31 Aug 1929 43 Annville Jackson KY Seward Co NE Utica NE Farm wife
1 Velma Marie Anstine 30 Nov 1908 27 Mar 1919 10 Seward Co NE Seward Co NE Utica NE
2 Lennie Lee (Severns) 9 Apr 1910 24 Sep 1997 87 Seward Co NE Centralia WA Claquato Cem WA Teacher
3 Aura Ellen (Dey) 2 Feb 1912 4 Jan 1985 62 Seward Co NE Riverside CA Teacher
4 Imogene Joyce (LeBaron) 5 Sep 1926 11 Sep 2005 79 Seward Co NE Federal Way WA WA
Lydia portrait

Lydia Baldwin, circa 1904
For Ida -- Lydia's younger sister -- penciled on back
Among Ida's keepsakes saved by her mother Ellen
Given to Ida's son William B. Wetherall by
Ellen, his aunt Sadie, or cousin Faye
Wetherall Family Collection

  1. Lydia ("Lydie") and Charles ("Charley" aka "Chas") married in Lincoln, Nebraska on 12 February 1908.
    Some reports say Lydia was born on 1 April. The 2 April date is based on her death certificate. Her youngest sister Ida was also born on 2 April.
    1. Lydia reportedly suffered from a long illness. Her death certificate lists the causes of death as "Carcinoma Liver / Secondary to carcinoma of sigmoid flex colon" and states that she had had a "Colostomy & resection" in 1927. Her funeral was conducted by Rev. Miller of Milford, which is about 12 miles south of Seward. She is buried at Utica Cemetery, about 14 miles west of Seward. The Anstine farm was at Utica.
    2. Charles died of stomach cancer. A home funeral was conducted by Rev. Miller of Milford. He was buried at Utica Cemetery with Lydia and Velma. His death certificate, signed by the same physician who attended Lydia, stated the cause of death as "Carcinoma Stomach" and noted that a "Gastroenterostomy" operation had been performed in February 1932, or 9 months before his death on 12 November 1932. Other particulars show that he was born on 27 December 1883 to "R.D. Anstine" of Macomb, Illinois, and "Helen Clites" of Pennsylvania. He was described as a white, widowed man who had been the husband of "Lydia Margaret". The informant was Archie Severns of Seward, Nebraska, Rt. 4.
  2. Velma was 10 when she died in 1919. She was "Thelma Anstine" on her death certifiate, but is "Velma" in all known family accounts, and apparently she is "Velma" on her headstone in Utica Cemetary.
  3. Lennie was 19 when her mother died, at which time Imogene, who was 2 or 3 at the time, became "mine" to raise as she writes in an autobiographical account of her life (see below).
    Lennie attended the University of Nebraska, became a teacher, and taught in a one-room school for three years.
    In 1931, a year before her father's death, Lennie married William Archie Severns, who she had met in high school. Archie was also from Utica, and their two children, a son Tex Lee (1934) and a daughter Billie Rae (1936), were born in Utica.
    Archie ran the Anstine farm after Charley died in 1932. They took Imogene with them when they moved to Washington in 1937.
    The 1940 census shows them living in Skookumchuck in Lewis County. William A. is 33, Lennie is 30, Tex Lee is 6, Billie Rae is 3, and Imogene Anstine -- described as the head's sister-in-law -- is 13. William A. and Lennie had finished 4 years of high school (H-4) and Imogene had finished 1 year (H-1). William A. is the owner of a general store and Lennie as a store helper.
    Archie, born 12 November 1906, died 2 January 1991 in Centralia. Lennie died 6 years later, also in Centralia. Both are buried at Claquato Cemetery in Chehalis, also in Lewis County, Washington.
  4. Aura married George M. Dey, who was also from Seward County, Nebraska.
    For a while in the 1930s, they lived in Goehner, a tiny town in Seward County near Utica (Darci Severns, email, 18 December 2013). Aura and George were living in Utica, Nebraska in 1940, in Idaho (probably in Coeur d'Alene) by 1942, in Coeur d'Alene in the late 1940s, and in Spokane by the mid 1950s. They spent some time in Riverside, California, where Aura died in 1985, but their permanent address was in Spokane, where George reportedly died. Both Aura and George are said to have been cremated.
    1. Aura's grand niece, Darci Severns, related to me that "George Dey, blind in 1987, rode a Greyhound bus alone from Spokane to Seattle to deliver to me her wedding ring on my high school graduation" pursuant to Aura's will. Darci added that she has worn the ring ever since. (Email, 23 October 2013)
  5. Imogene or "Imie" was raised by her grandmother Ellen Baldwin after Lydia's death in 1929.
    The 1930 census shows Ellen living with the Anstine family. Most likely she had been living there during Lydia's bout with cancer.
    The 1930 census shows Sadie Williams also living in Seward, at the Nebraska Industrial Home for unwed mothers, where she was the resident nurse.
    Lennie also helped raise Imogene after her mother's death, and raised her as part of her own family after their father died in 1932.
    Imogene graduated from Centralia High School, in Centralia, Lewis County, Washington, in 1943. On 3 March 1945, she married Keith Roger LeBaron of Centralia. The "Marriage Return" states that the marriage license was issued on 2 March 1945. It describes Imogene as 18, "White" and a "Spinster". Roger is 19, "White", and a "Bachelor". She was an "O.P.A. [Office of Price Administration] Clerk" and he was a "meat Cutter".
    The LeBarons lived in Centralia until at least the late 1940s, in Seattle from no later than the mid 1950s. Around 1990, they spent some time in Hemet, Riverside County, California. In the mid 1990s they were living in Federal Way, King County, Washington, where Imogene passed away. Keith, born on 2 May 1925, died on 21 July 2011 in Seattle.
    The LeBarons had two daughters, Sherrie and Deborah. Sherrie Kae was born on 22 April 1946 in Centralia. She married a man named Wene and died in Seattle on 15 August 1988. Deborah "Debbie" Anne was in 1949. She married Tacoma-born Gorden Matthew Hearst in Seattle on 10 August 1968 (license 5 August 1969). Sherrie K. Wene was one of the witnesses.

German-French migration of Anstine line

Charles Anstine was the 4th of 10 children and the 3rd of 7 sons of Douglas Richard [or Richard Douglas] Anstine and Helen Belle Clites. His father, born on 1 April 1857 in Industry, Illinois, and his mother, born on 24 June 1852 in Tipton County, Pennsylvania, married on 25 December 1877 in Emmerson, Mills County, Iowa.

Charles's parents died in Seward County, Nebraska, within a few years after his death, his mother on 15 April 1937, his father on 29 January 1939. Richard D. and Helen B. Anstine share a common headstone in Utica Cemetery in Utica in Seward County, Nebraska.

Charles was a 5th-generation descendant of Sigesmund (Simon) Anstein (counted as the 1st generation) through Simon's 1st wife, Dorothy Anstine (maiden name uncertain), who he married in 1787. Simon was born on 4 November 1763 in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, and died on 22 February 1849 in York County, Pennsylvania, Simon himself was a 5th-generation descendant of Nicholaus Anstein (counted as the 1st generation), who born between 1630–1640 in Germany, and Anna Barbara Buerg.

Charles thus represents the 4th generation of his line to be born in North America after Simon Anstein's migration to Pennsylvania from France, and the 8th generation in succession from Nicholaus Anstein, the line's known German progenitor (counted as the 0th generation).

One of Nicholaus Anstein's sons, Johann Michael Anstein (1663-1746), migrated to France in the late 17th century and married Catherine Bürger. Simon's paternal grandfather Johannes Anstein (1706-1789), and his father Johan Jürg Anstein (1735-1799), were born and raised in France. His father migrated from France to Pennsylvania in 1751 and sired as many as 13 children, including 8 sons, from whom several lines of Ansteins branced as Anstines, Enstines, and Onstines. Simon was Johann's and Catherine's 8th child and 5th son.

Source: Anstine / Enstine / Onstine Family [www.anstinefamily.com], "Outline Descendant Report for Nicholaus Anstein", 2012, 4 pages.


Anstine migration to Seward, Nebraska

Nebraska -- especially Seward County -- is full of Anstines. Charles Anstine's parents moved to Seward County, Nebraksa, from Mills County, Iowa, between 1881-1883. Charles's two older brothers and possibly his older sister were born in Iowa. He was thus the 1st or 2nd of Richard's and Helen's children to be born in Nebraska.

Uncle Seth and Aunt Maude

Charles's 2nd younger brother, Seth Richard Anstine, and his wife Maude, were known as "Uncle Seth and Aunt Maude" to the Anstine sisters. Seth, born on 3 May 1888 in Seward, Seward County, Nebraska, married Ethel Maude Hackworth (b1888), his 2nd wife (his 1st wife was Maude McGrew), on 22 December 1909 in Seward County. Seth stated on his 5 June 1917 World War draft Registration Card that he was a self-employed blacksmith in Stablehurst in Seward County and sufferred from deafness in his left ear. Maude died in 1954, Seth on 6 July 1973, and they share the same headstone in Seward Cemetery. Apparently they had no children.

Sources: (1) Darci Severns, (2) Anstine / Enstine / Onstine Family [www.anstinefamily.com], "Outline Descendant Report for Sigesmund (Simon) Anstein", 2012, pages 2-7 of 38 pages, (3) and Ancestor.com.

Top  

How Lydia Baldwin met Charles Anstine

Marriages, even when arranged, begin with a boy-meet-girl encounter. Where and why Lydia Baldwin met Charles Anstine can be conjectured from the few footprints they left in the 1908 Lincoln, Nebraska city directory.

Lennie Severns, Lydia's and Charley's 2nd daughter, began her family saga, published in 1985 (see below), with this recollection of how her parents met.

My parents [Lydia Baldwin and Charley Anstine] met in Lincoln [Nebraska] when both were rooming at mom's sister's [Sadie (Baldwin) Williams] home. Daddy was a railroad engineer and mom was attending [Lincoln] Business College. Their courtship was brief. The Baldwin family was moving to Spokane, Washington, and refused to let mother stay there because she was not married, even though [in 1907-1908] she was 21 years old. My, how times have changed!"

Lennie's story, like other such stories, was based on what she heard over the years, perhaps in part from her parents while they were alive, and probably in part from Aunt Sadie, if not also from Aunt Meda and even Grandma Baldwin, after her Lydia and Charles passed away. Most such stories are inevitably mixtures of fact and fiction, the products of selective and possibly faulty memory, romantic imagination, and other agents of alteration and embellishment that change or distort a story each time it is told.

1907-1910 Lincoln Nebraska directories

Like most such stories, however, Lennie's account of how her parents met is probably essentially true. As it turns out, her account is on the whole substantiated by listings in the Lincoln Nebraska Directory, Compiled and Printed by Jacob North & Company, Printers and Binders, Lincoln, Nebraska.

The 1907 Lincoln Nebraska Directory shows "Ellen Baldwin" and "Neuton B. Baldwin" [sic = Newton] both working and residing at the "Asylum" -- referring to the Nebraska Hospital for the Insane (see details below).

Charles Ansttine, about 24 in 1907, is not listed, presumably because he is working elsewhere.

Lydia Baldwin, then around 21, is not listed, supposedly because she and her sisters -- Meda 19 and Ida 17 -- are living either with their parents at the insane asylum, or with their sister Sadie Williams and her husband, Charles, in Iowa.

Charles Williams is not listed because, in 1906, when the 1907 directory was compiled, he and Sadie were living in Iowa. Sadie gave birth to Faye Williams in Knoxville, Iowa, on 4 October 1906.

By 1907, when the 1908 directory was compiled, Charles Williams, and Sadie and Faye, are living in Nebraska. Sadie gave birth to Claude in Lincoln, Nebraska, on 28 November 1907.

Lincoln Business College The Home of the Lincoln Business College, Lincoln, Neb.
Postmarked LINCOLN, NEB. / AUG 21 / 730 PM / 1909
4th floor, Oliver Theatre Building
SW corner 13th and P streets
(Yosha Bunko collection)

Locomotive firemen

The fireman on a steam locomotive shoveled or stoked coal into the firebox of the boiler, made sure the coal was properly distributed and burning and that there was enough water in the boiler, and otherwise kept the boiler at an optimum level of power. The engineer controlled the locomotive by throttling and braking the engine, and the fireman assisted the engineer, who gave orders, in other aspects of operating the locomotive, signalling, and keeping an eye on the track ahead. The fireman's job was dirty, hot, even dangerous, and required more brawn than brain. But a fireman needed to know how to keep a boiler safely fired up, and engineers generally apprenticed as firemen in order to master these skills. Many young men who became firemen aspired to be engineers, who had more status and better pay.

The 1908 Lincoln Nebraska Directory shows the following three listings.

1908 Lincoln Nebraska Directory

Anstine Charles, fireman C B & Q, res 726 Q
Baldwin Lydia, stu Lin Bus Col, res 720 Q
Williams Charles F, fireman C B & Q, res 720 Q

The 1907 directory (but not the 1906 or 1908 directories) lists the following boarding houses in the classified business directory section. This would have been the edition available to people looking for accommodations in late 1906 or early 1907.

1907 Lincoln Nebraska Directory
Classified Business Directory
Boarding Houses

Cook William C, 720 Q
Culp Stacy, 726 Q

Charles Anstine, about 25 in 1908, is a locomotive fireman for the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad. He is residing at a boarding house a block away from the passenger depot.

Charles F. Williams, also a fireman for C B & Q, is residing at a boarding house right next door. Presumably, Sadie Williams and their infant children, Faye and Claude, are also living there.

Lydia Baldwin, then around 22, is living at the same boarding house as Charles F. Williams. She is attending Lincoln Business College, about 5 blocks directly east of the boarding house.

N.B. and Ellen Baldwin are not listed because they have moved to Spokane with Meda and Ida. Apparently they have left Lydia with Sadie.

The 1908 Spokane Washington Directory shows N.B. and Ellen Baldwin, and Ida and apparently also Meda, living and studying there. So presumably they left Lincoln sometime in 1907 -- and Lydia remained with Charles and Sadie Williams, who had come to Lincoln, Nebraska from Knoxville, Iowa, after Sadie gave birth to Faye in 1906.

The 1909 Lincoln Nebraska Directory shows the following listing.

1909 Lincoln Nebraska Directory

Williams Charles F. fireman C B & Q res 1113 P

Presumably Sadie and the children are living with him at what appear to be better accommodations. The address is found in the "Furnished Rooms and Lodgings" section of the classified pages of the 1908 directory, which shows Kynett Mrs Agnes, 1113 P as the landlady.

Charles F. Williams is not listed in the 1910 directory. The 1910 census shows Sadie and the children -- but not Charles -- living in St. Maries, Idaho, with the Baldwins and Meda.

720 Q Street boarding house

The neighborhood immediately around Lincoln station had many hotels, boarding houses, eateries, bars, and other such accommodations for railroad hands and people in transit. The blocks to the east of the station, south of the college campus, had many vocation schools and more hotels, boarding houses, and furnished rooms and lodgings for students and others in need of places to live.

Q Street runs parallel to R Street, which originally marked the southern boundary of the University of Nebraska Campus (today parts of the campus extend as far as Q street).

The 700 block of Q Street is in today's "Historic Hay Market" area a couple of blocks southwest of the university. The block is immediately north of the Lincoln Station Building, formerly the passenger depot of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, on 7th between P and Q streets.

Lincoln Business College was in the Oliver Theatre Building on the southwest corner of 13th and P streets, about 5 blocks directly east of 720 Q and the station.

Editing Lennie's story

Lennie Severns's story of how her parents met turns out to be essentially true. It is difficult to verify such stories, after the passage of so much time, when the principals have long gone, and even those who heard them from the lips of primary witnesses have passed away.

"Fact checking" is limited to available independent sources of information. The 1908 Lincoln Nebraska Directory is hardly an infallible source, but it sheds new light on a number of details in Lennie's account.

The 1908 directory, compiled in 1907 and probably published late that year, reflects 1907 circumstances. We know from other sources that Charles Anstine and Lydia Baldwin married on 12 February 1908, and that Velma, their 1st daughter, was born on 30 November 1908 in Seward County, Nebraska.

We also know a bit about the lay of the land -- the geography of Lincoln at the time they were living there -- where they lived in relation to where they worked or sent to school. We also know more from the city directory than we do from Lennie's account about the nature of Charley Anstines relationship with the Williams and Baldwin families and their residential arrangements.

Based on everything we can conjecture about Lydia's circumstances in 1907, Lennie's story could be edited like this.

My parents, Lydia Baldwin and Charley Anstine, met in Lincoln, Nebraska, when Lydia was rooming with mom's sister, Sadie Williams, and her husband, Charles Williams, and their two infant children, Faye and Claude, at a boarding house in a rather wild part of town near the train station. Daddy, who was rooming at a boarding house next door, and Sadie's husband, Charles, both worked as firemen for the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, and mom was attending Lincoln Business College a few blocks away. Their courtship was brief. The Baldwin family was moving to Spokane, Washington, and refused to let mother stay there because she was not married, even though she was 21 years old. My, how times have changed!"

In 1912 and 1913, just 5 five years after Lydia and the Williams family left the boarding house, 720 Q Street became the stage for a number of incidents involving prostitution, disturbing the public, and assault. The following articles, clipped from the Lincoln Daily News, speak for themselves.

720 Q Street, Lincoln, Nebraska

Five years after Sadie Williams and Lydia Baldwin lived there

Lincoln Daily News
Saturday, July 27, 1912
Page 3

Lincoln Daily News 1912-07-27

Lincoln Daily News
Thursday, August 22, 1912
Page 8

Lincoln Daily News 1912-08-22 Lincoln Daily News 1912-08-22

Lincoln Daily News
Tuesday, July 22, 1913
Page 6

Lincoln Daily News 1913-07-06

The writing represents a very high quality of courtroom reportage, in the days when journalists learned how to write without the constraints that regulate news style today. Most newspaper editors today would probably insist that parts of these article be recast in a drier, more mechanical style, and reflect present-day standards of "political correctness" regarding the treatment of race. Only the tabloids would possibly tolerate, if not encourage, the dramatic affect that yesteryear's writers regarded as essential to a good story.

Top  

5.3 Ure-Baldwin

Meda (Baldwin) (Aunt Meda) and Clifford Ure

Table 5.3   Clifford and Meda (Baldwin) Ure family
Table Name Birth Death Age Born Died Buried Vocation
0 Clifford Melvin Ure 1887 3 Jul 1953 65/66 Iowa Spokane WA Woodlawn Cem ID Postman
T5 0 Almeda Jane (Baldwin) 12 Dec 1888 Nov 1971 82 Kentucky Spokane WA Woodlawn Cem ID Milliner
1 Greta Ava (Lemmer) 15 Jul 1912 9 Oct 1999 87 St. Maries ID Spokane WA Hope Cem East Hope ID Office clerk
2 Herbert Dale 22 Dec 1928 3 Jul 2004 75 St. Maries ID Spokane WA Advertising
Ure Clifford Melvin Ure
Image copped from Ancestry.com tree of
Clifford's great granddaughter Patricia Flint
Ure Meda Jane (Baldwin) Ure aka "Danny"
Photo received 12 January 2017 from
Meda's great granddaughter Patricia Flint
Ure Mailman delivers letter to his wife
Photo received 14 February 2014 from
Clifford's and Meda's grandaughter Lois Slater
Ure Clifford M. Ure's obituary
The Spokesman-Review, 6 July 1953, page 6
Clipped from Newspapers.com
Ure Meda Ure's funeral notice
The Spokesman-Review, 23 November 1971, page 18
Clipped from Newspapers.com
  1. C.M. Ure, 24, a barber, and Meda Baldwin, 22, no occupation given, married in Spokane, Washington, on 15 March 1911.
    Clifford was born in Iowa to John Ure, born in Illinois, and Adella Miller, born in Iowa.
    Meda was born in Kentucky to N.B. Baldwin, born in Virginia, and Ellen Steele, born in Kentucky.
  2. Greta Ava is "Greta A." on both the 1920 and 1930 censuses. Her 1st cousin, William B. Wetherall, called her simply "Greta". She married William Harlan Lemmer, and they had 2 children, a son Harlan Eugene or "Gene", and a daughter Lois. William Harlan, born on 13 September 1904, passed away in Spokane on 1 May 1985, and they are buried together in Hope Cemetery in East Hope, Idaho, where they had a summer home.
  3. Herbert Dale is "Dale H." on 1930 and "Herbert D." on 1940 censuses. However, he was generally called just "Dale" or "H. Dale". He married Carol Louise Trappe and they had 4 children. Carol died on died 9 April 2010, apparently also in Spokane. See Dale's and Carol's obituaries below.

The 1908 city directory for Spokane, Washington shows a "Madge Baldwin" boarding at the same address with "Ida M. Baldwin" while attending North West Business College. "Newton B. Baldwin" is shown running a restaurant. The 1909 Spokane directory shows both "Meda Baldwin" and "Ida M. Baldwin" living at the same address as "Newton B. Baldwin". Ida is attending Blair Business College and Meda is a cashier at a restaurant, presumably her father's, which is next door to their residence.

The 1910 census shows Meda living with her parents in St. Maries, Kootenai County, Idaho and working as a milliner at her own shop. She is still single. Clifford Ure is living by himself in Fernwood, Kootenai and working as a barber at his own shop.

The 1911 St. Maries directory shows Clifford Ure, a barber, and Meda Ure, an operator for the Interstate Telephone Company, at the same address.

The 1916-1917 directory shows Clifford Ure working for Ure and Lawing, possibly a barbershop.

The 1920, 1930, and 1940 censuses shows Clifford Ure working as a mail carrier in St. Maries. By 1945, however, he and Meda were residing in Spokane, Washington. The 1945 Spokane city directory lists his occupation as creamery worker. The 1950 and 1952 directories do not show an occupation. By 1950, their son H. Dale Ure and his wife Carol L. are also residing in Spokane but at a different address.

Clifford died in 1953, Meda in 1971, both in Spokane, but they are buried together in St. Maries. Greta and her husband Harlan Lemmer died in Spokane, Harlan in 1985, Greta in 1999, and they are buried together in East Hope, Idaho. See the section below on Baldwin-Steele graves for details.

Baldwin-Steele and Wetherall-Hardman families meet in Idaho

Several of William B. Wetherall's Baldwin-Steele relatives met his future mother-in-law, Ullie Hardmen, and very likely also his future father-in-law, Owen Hardman, sometime between 1936 and 1938, when he and my mother, Orene Hardman, were courting in Idaho. Shortly after my left for San Francisco to work as a clerk for the 9th District Court, my mother went to San Francisco to marry him. The marriage, which had the blessings of Orene's parents and WBW's relatives, was witnessed by only a few of my father's local friends. No relatives from either side were present.

WBW's first job after graduating from law school and passing the Idaho bar in 1937 was in Orofino, on the Clearwater river a few miles upstream from Peck, Idaho. His mother, Ida (Baldwin) Wetherall, had been committed to the insane asylum in Orofino around 1912 and had died there in 1923. Orene was born at the Hardman ranch on Central Ridge though the birth was recorded in nearby Peck. She was raised on the ranch, and when in her teens in Peck, where Ullie and Owen had settled after selling the ranch in the mid 1920s. Orene graduated from high school in Peck then went to college in Moscow. From 1935 to 1936 she taught at Yellow Rose School, a one-room all-grade elementary school on Little Bear Ridge near Deary. In 1937, however, she taught at Pierce, which is near Orofino, a bit further up the Clearwater from Peck.

St. Maries photo

The following two pictures record what was probably the first meeting of the Baldwin-Steele and Hardman-Hunter families after WBW and Orene declared their intention to marry. The choice of where to meet would have been Peck (where the Hardman-Hunters lived) or St. Maries (where the Baldwin-Steeles lived).

My mother's recollection was that the photographs were taken in St. Maries. Interestingly, Ullie Hardman, who was in the photographs, wrote identifications on her copies of the prints -- on two different occasions three or so decades later in her life, probably in the mid 1960s and early 1970s -- in which which she makes a number of mistakes, suggesting that she was experiencing the sort of memory loss that, by the mid 1970s, led to her move to a convalesent home, where her dementia continued to worsen.

WBW, a Wetherall-Baldwin, was raised by his mother's Baldwin-Steele family for the first several years of his life in St. Maries, Idaho, then by his father's Wetherall-Beaman family in Knoxville, Iowa, and finally by his father's new Wetherall-Van Houton family in Des Moines, Iowa. While going to college in Idaho, however, he lived with the Ure-Baldwin family of his maternal aunt, Meda, in St. Maries. His maternal grandmother Ellen Baldwin, and at times also his maternal aunt Sadie Williams, also lived in St. Maries, as did Sadie's daughter (WBW's 1st cousin) Faye Mathews (later Faye Rebenstorf) and Faye's daughter Marilyn Mathews (later Marilyn Disrud).

Neither Owen Hardmen (Orene's father, Ullie's husband, my grandfather) nor Faye Mathews (Sadie's daughter, WBW's 1st cousin, my 1st cousin once removed) are in the photographs, which appear to have been taken in turns WBW and Orene Hardman. At the time the pictures were taken (1936-1937), WBW was living in St. Maries with the Ures. According to the 1940 census, Ellen was in St. Maries in 1935. Sadie was in Spokane, Washington, in 1935, but by 1940 she was with Ellen in St. Maries. Faye and Marilyn were living in Spokane, and Ullie Hardman was in Peck, Idaho.

Marilyn was born on 22 December 1934, and I would guess that the photographs were taken in 1937 rather than 1936. Sadie was probably carrying for Marilyn, who was not yet of school age, while Faye, by then a single mother, worked. I would guess that Owen, too, was probably working.

Ullie Hardman with Baldwins Ullie Hardman with Baldwins

Meeting of Hardman-Hunter and Baldwin-Steele families in St. Maries, circa 1937
Left Photo by Bill Wetherall showing Orene Hardman on right with her mother Ullie and WBW's Baldwin-Steele family
Right Photo by Orene Wetherall showing Bill Wetherall on right with his Baldwin-Steele family and Orene's mother Ullie
Wetherall Family photos

Left to right
Clifford Ure (1887-1953) -- Meda's husband
Dale Ure (1928-2004) -- Meda's and Clifford's son, WBW's 1st cousin
Meda (Baldwin) Ure (1888-1971) -- WBW's maternal aunt
Ellen (Steele) Baldwin (1863-1943) -- WBW's maternal grandmother, mother of Sadie, Lydia, Meda, and WBW's mother Ida
Ullie (Hunter) Hardman (1891-1980) -- Mother of WBW's fiancee, Orene Hardman (1913-2003)
Sadie (Baldwin) Williams (1883-1964) -- WBW's maternal aunt
Marilyn Mathews (1934-2013) -- WBW's 1st cousin once removed, daughter of Sadie's daughter Faye (Williams) Mathews, later Rebenstorf
Left photo Orene Hardman, later Wetherall (1913-2003) = LOH, Bill's fiancee, Ullie's daughter
Right photo William Bascom Wetherall (1911-2013) = WBW, Orene's fiance, Ullie's future son-in-law

Ullie Hardman with Baldwins

Lois (Lemmer) Slater, the daughter of Meda and Clifford Ure's daughter Greta Ava (Ure) Lemmer, confirmed my tentative identifications of Clifford, Dale, Meda, and Marilyn. She characterized her Ure grandparents -- and Claude Williams, Sadie's son and Faye's brother, and my father, WBW -- as follows (email, 13 February 2014, [bracketed remarks] mine).

From left to right Clifford (Daddy Cliff, my grandfather), Dale, Almeda Jane (Danny, my grandmother), the next two people [Ellen Baldwin and Ullie Hardman] I do not know, then Aunt Sadie and Marilyn. The one on the right is your father then? What a handsome man!! I thought maybe it was Claude but he wasn't as good looking.

Of interest here is that, in the mid 1960s or so, when Ullie sat down and identified the people in many family photos, she wrote on the back of her copy of the print to the left -- "At St. Maries / Bill's family / Aunt Meda, husband & son / Grandma Baldwin / myself / Aunt Sadie / Marilyn / Claud [sic = Claude]". However, on the front of her copy of the photo to the left, which was found in the small red album she carried in her purse, she wrote "Stanleys -- early 50's" -- and on the back "In Calif. -- / The Stanleys / early 50's".

In the first case, she recognized that she was looking at "Bill's family", and recalled the names or relationships of most -- but took her (future) son-in-law "Bill" for his 1st cousin, Claude, Sadie's son and Marilyn's uncle. In the second case, she associates the place with California, and the people with the Stanleys -- perhaps someone she knew in Idaho who had moved to Califoria -- apparently not wondering why she and her daughter Orene look too young to be in California in the 1950s.

Lois's testimony was the first I had from anyone in the Baldwin-Steele family on the identity of people in Baldwin-Steele photographs. But Lois, my 2nd cousin, did not recognize her maternal (and my paternal) great grandmother Ellen Baldwin.

Lois, born in 1939, undoubtedly met Ellen Baldwin before Ellen died in 1943 -- when Lois was only 3-1/2 years old. I probably also met Ellen and Sadie, and Meda and Clifford, in the summer of 1941, when I was only a few months old. My parents brought me to Peck that summer to meet my Hardman grandparents and Hunter grandfather, and I can't imagine my father not taking us to St. Maries, which is not far away, to show me to his Baldwin-Steele kinfolk there, who were directly responsible for his upbringing. . But of course I have no memories of that summer other than those created by the numerous photographs that were taken of me in Peck.

It remains unclear as to whether Faye met Ullie on the occasion the above photograph was taken. However, she clearly got to know Ullie, well enough in fact to drop in on her when she visited Lewiston from Coeur d'Alene later in Ullie's life. Faye also knew my maternal aunt, Ullie's older daughter Babe, who lived in various communities in eastern Idaho and western Washington, and was entirely at home in the larger Spokane, Coeur d'Alene, St. Maries, and Lewiston-Clarkston area.

Top  

5.4 Wetherall-Baldwin

William R. and Ida (Baldwin) Wetherall

See Wetherall-Baldwin-Van Houton and related families page for details.

Top  

5.1 Sadie's children

5.13 Williams-Mathews-Rebenstorf

Faye (Williams) (Mathews) (Nelson) Rebenstorf (1906-1995)

Table 5.13   Faye's marriages with L.J. Mathews and Howard C. Rebenstorf
Table Name Birth Death Age Born Died Buried Vocation
0 Faye Marguerite Williams 4 Oct 1906 25 Nov 1995 88 Knoxville IA Coeur d'Alene ID CDA Memorial Cem ID Teacher, Accountant
0 L.J. Mathews Washington
1 Marilyn Anne Mathews (Disrud) 22 Dec 1934 21 Jul 2013 78 Spokane WA Coeur d'Alene ID Riverview Cem CDA ID
0 Nelson At the time of this writing, nothing more is known about Faye's 2nd husband.
0 Howard C. Rebenstorf 30 Aug 1898 27 Sep 1966 Wisconsin Coeur d'Alene ID CDA Memorial Cem ID Grocer
Faye Williams Faye Williams

Above and right
Faye Williams, portrait and card, circa 1925
Gumbel Studio, Seward, Nebraska

Above right
Faye Williams, portrait, circa 1930
That Man Gale Studio, York and Aurora, Nebraska

Wetherall Family Collection

Faye Williams Faye Williams

Faye Williams in 1920s with 1st cousins Lennie and Aura Anstine, 1920s
Appears to be in Seward where Sadie was working
Wetherall Family Collection

Faye Williams

Faye Williams with dog, 1920s
Probably taken in Seward, Nebraska
Wetherall Family Collection

Bill Wetherall and Faye Williams

Faye Williams with 1st cousin Bill Wetherall
Probably St. Maries, Idaho, early 1930s
Wetherall Family Collection

Faye Mathews Faye Mathews

Click on images to enlarge
Faye Williams marries L. J. Mathews in Spokane on 10 February 1934
Witnessed by brother Claude J. Williams and mother Sadie E. Williams
Left Return filed 15 February 1934 shows ages and marital statuses of newlyweds
and names Faye's father as A.P. Williams, born in Morristown, Tennessee
Right Marriage certified and recorded on 19/20 February 1934
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com

Faye Mathews

Faye's Delayed Certificate of Birth
Iowa State Department of Health
Vital Statistics Division
23 March 1942

Born: Knoxville, Marion county, Iawa
Name: Faye Marguerite Williams (first signed)
Name: Faye Williams Nelson (oversigned)
Father: Ambrose Powell Williams, born Tennessee
Mother: Sarah (or Sadie) E. Baldwin, born Kentucky
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com

Faye Mathews

Faye (Baldwin) (Mathews) Nelson marries Howard Rebenstorf
Missoula county, Montana, 26 October 1944
Residents of Coeur d'Alene, Idaho
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com

  1. On 10 February 1934, Faye M. Williams of St. Maries [sic = Kootenai] County, Idaho, married L.J. Mathews of King County, Washington, in the presence of her brother Claude J. Williams and mother Sadie E. Williams, in Spokane, Washington. The signed license was returned on 15 Feburary and certified and filed on 19/20 February 1934. She was 27 and single (1st marriage), and he was 35 and a widower (2nd marriage). They appear to have separated a couple of years later and divorced by 1940.
  2. Marilyn Mathews, who was born on 22 December 1934, appears to have been partly raised by her grandmother Sadie Williams, possibly with the help also of her great grandmother Ellen Baldwin, in St. Maries, Idaho, during the late 1930s and early 1940s while Faye was working in nearby Spokane, Washington.
  3. The 1940 census shows Faye as the head of a household in which she is the only member. She is divorced. Marilyn is divorced with Marilyn.
  4. By the mid 1940s, Faye had married Howard C. Rebenstorf, who became Marilyn's stepfather at least informally. Howard, too, had been married and divorced, but apparently he had no children from his previous marriage. Marilyn's legal family name appears to have remained Mathews, her name at the time she married Norman K. Disrud in 1957.

Faye in censuses

Faye was born in Knoxville, Iowa, according to her obituary (see below).

The 1910 census shows Fay [sic = Faye] M. Williams (3), living with her mother Sadie E. Williams (26), and her brother Claud [sic = Claude] J. Williams (2), in the St. Maries, Idaho, with her maternal grandparents, Newton B. Baldwin (47) and Martha E. Baldwin (46),

I have not found Faye, or Sadie or Claude, in the 1920 census. But stories passed down by descendants of Sadie's sister Lydia Anstine, who lived in Utica in Seward County, Nebraska, have Faye and Claude living with Sadie in Nebraska.

The 1930 census shows Faye working as a teacher in Lincoln, Nebraska.

The 1940 census shows Faye living in Spokane, Washington, as Faye Mathews (33), divorced, a book keeper at a bus transportation company. She was living at the same place in Spokane in 1935.

Faye Williams

Christmas card from Faye Mathews
Wetherall Family Collection

Faye in city directories

Faye is listed as a student in the 1928-1930 Lincoln Nebraska city directories. She is not listed in the 1927 or 1931 directories.

Both the 1928 and 1929 Lincoln Nebraska Directories show Williams Faye stu r1541 S.

The 1930 Lincoln Nebraska Directory shows Williams Fay [sic = Faye] stu r341 N 12th apt 2.

The 1930 directory was compiled in 1929. Presumably Faye completed her normal school education and was teaching by the time of the 1930 census (see above).

Note that neither Lennie nor Aura Anstine are shown in the 1928-1930 Lincoln directories. They, too, would have been enrolled in teacher training courses, presumably in Lincoln, about this time. Perhaps they commuted to the city by bus or by car. They may also, at times, have stayed with Faye. In the meantime, Sadie was the resident head nurse of a home for unwed mothers in Seward (1930 census).

Spokane directories show Faye as "Mathews" in 1937 (Faye), 1938 (Mrs Faye M), 1939 (Mrs Fay M), 1940 (Mrs Faye), and 1941 (Faye M). She is typically described as a bookkeeper for Auto Interurban, a bus transportation company.

A 1947 Idaho city directory shows her living and working in Coeur d'Alene as the wife of Howard C. Rebenstorf, who apparently she met and married in the early or mid 1940s.

Faye and William B. Wetherall

The 4 Baldwin sisters bore 9 cousins, 8 of whom survived their childhood.

Baldwin sisters Cousins
Sadie Williams (1883-1964) Faye (Mathews) (Nelson) Rebenstorf (1906-1995)
Claude Williams (1907-1977)
Lydia Anstine (1886-1929) Velma Anstine (1908-1919)
Lennie Severns (1910-1997)
Aura Dey (1912-1985)
Imogene LeBaron (1926-2005)
Meda Ure (1888-1971) Greta Lemmer (1912-1999)
Dale Ure (1928-2004)
Ida Wetherall (1890-1923) William B. Wetherall (1911-2013)

William B. Wetherall (WBW) was partly raised by, or lived in the same household with, all of his aunts -- Sadie, Lydia, and Meda -- and he had a practically sibling relationship with Faye and Claude, who were a few years older, but also with Lennie and Greta, who were the nearest to him in age.

Faye seems to have been WBW's closest cousin in terms of how much contact they continued to have during their adult lives, both in terms of correspondence and visitations. Faye and Claude were also the only cousins whose names were familiar to WBW's children, including this writer. Their mother, Sadie, as also the most familar "aunt" in our family, and we have more photographs of Sadie, Faye, and Claude.

Faye visited us a number of times in both San Francisco and Grass Valley, usually in conjunction with trips she made to California related to her work and other activities. During one such visit, all members of WBW's family, except my sister Mary Ellen, met Faye in San Francisco while she was attending a convention in the city. Faye taped a conversation we had over dinner in Chinatown -- her first encounter with Chinese food. And after her death, her daughter Marilyn sent the tape to my father. I now have the tape, which includes gossip about the extended Baldwin-Steele family.

Faye's obituary

Faye died on 25 November 1995 in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, where she had lived most of her adult life. She is buried in Coeur d'Alene Memorial Gardens Cemetery, Kootenai County, Idaho (see below). The following obituary is a reformatted version of an obituary published in The Spokesman-Review on 28 November 1995. The [bracketed] clarifications and red highlighting are mine.

The Spokesman-Review
[Tuesday] November 28, 1995 in Idaho
Obituaries

Faye Rebenstorf
Coeur d'Alene [Idaho]

A private service and burial was held for Faye Rebenstorf, 89, who died Saturday [25 November 1995].

Mrs. Rebenstorf was born in Knoxville, Iowa. She attended the University of Nebraska [in Lincoln, Nebraska] and Kinman Business University [in Spokane, Washington].

She taught in elementary and secondary schools and in college.

She and her late husband, Howard [Rebenstorf], started Howard's Market and Nursery, now known as Duncan's Garden and Nursery [in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho].

She held many accounting positions in Coeur d'Alene and also held a real estate license.

Her memberships included Coeur d'Alene Bible Church, Christian Business and Professional Women's Club, the American Society of Women Accountants, the Idaho Retired Teachers Association and the National Council of Senior Citizens. She also was past state director of the American Association of Retired Persons.

Her husband died in 1966.

Mrs. Rebenstorf's survivors include her daughter, Marilyn Disrud, one grandson, Todd Disrud, and one great-grandson, Nathaniel Disrud, all of Coeur d'Alene.

Memorial contributions may be made to Coeur d'Alene Bible Church or the Alzheimer's Association, North Idaho Chapter.

Howard C. Rebenstorf (1898-1966)

Howard C. Rebenstorf was born on 30 August 1898 in Wisconsin. A Bonner County, Idaho marriage record shows that he married Hedwig H. Weiss, in Sandpoint, Idaho, on 20 September 1920. Bonner County and Sandpoint are immediately north of Kootenai County and Coeur d'Alene, which are just west of Spokane County and Spokane in Washington. Hedwig H. [Helene] -- who appears in most other records as "Hattie" or "Hattie H." -- was born in Wisconsin on 11 June 1898 to Austrian-born parents.

The 1930 census shows Howard and Hattie, both then 31, but 22 when married, living in Coeur d'Alene, apparently without any children. He is a laborer working for the state highway department, and she is a switchboard operator at the telephone company.

The 1938 directory for Coeur d'Alene shows Howard and Hattie living together at 207 N 10th. He is working for Potlach Forests, she at the Tenth Street Grocery. The same directory shows a "Cora Rebenstorf (wid Edgar B.)" living at 818 Garden Avenue. Cora was his mother (Cora Stella Rudsell), and Edgar B. had been his father ("Ed" Rebenstorf).

I have not found either Howard or Hattie in a 1940 census record. But the 1940 Coeur d'Alene directory shows Hattie living as "Mrs. Hattie H. Rebenstorf" at the same 207 N 10th address and still working at the same grocery, while Howard is listed immediately below her as a millworker residing at 502 Foster Avenue. Apparently they are separated.

The 1947 census shows "Mrs. Hattie H. Rebenstorf" living at the same address and working at the same grocery store. Immediately below her is "Howard C. Rebenstorf (Faye M.)" residing at 1033 N 2d. No occupations or places of work are noted for either Howard or Faye.

The 1949 directory shows Hattie at the same address and place of work. Howard and Faye are residing at 902 N 4th, and Faye is said to be working at the Camp Joy Grocery.

The 1952 directory shows Hattie at the same address and place of work. Faye and Howard are separately listed, she as "Mrs. Faye M. Rebenstorf" working as a bookeeper for Hall Plumbing and Heating, he as "Howard C. Rebenstorf" working at Howard's Market, his own store. Both Faye and Howard are residing at 1928 N 4th -- yet another address.

Howard died in Coeur d'Alene on 27 September 1966. Faye died on 25 November 1995, also in Coeur d'Alene. Both are buried in Coeur d'Alene Memorial Cemetery. Howard's headstone has a simple cross above his name, and shows his rank and occupation as a "World War I" veteran. Faye's headstone refers to her as "Beloved Mother, Grandmother, and Great Grandmother" and has strongly Christian motiffs."

A "Hattie Hel Rebenstorf" died on 12 July 1982 in Monument, Grant County, Oregon, according to a transcribed Oregon death index. She is buried at Monument Cemetery, where her headstone name is Hattie N. Rebenstorf and she is memorialized as "Aunt" in quotation marks.

Assuming that the Hattie Rebenstorf who died in Orgeon is Howard's 1st wife -- and she seems to be -- the significance of the different middle initial on the headstone is unclear. The "quotation marks" around "aunt" suggests that she was an "aunt" by address but not by blood or law to the person(s) who buried her.

Marilyn A. (Mathews) Disrud (1934-2013)

Marilyn Anne Disrud was born Mathews in Spokane, Washington, on 22 December 1934. Legally, at least, she appears to have remained Mathews when her mother remarried in the 1940s, and she became Disrud when she married in the 1957. She died in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, on 21 July 2013 and is buried at Riverview Cemetery there. Her headstone, which also has strongly Christian motiffs, includes the name and date of birth of her surviving husband, Norman K. [Kenneth] Disrud -- 13 April 1929.

An obituary, possibly posted by her husband or their son, Todd Lee Disrud, states that she was "preceded in death by her parents Howard and Faye Rebenstorf".

Norman Kenneth Disrud (1929-2016)

Marilyn's husband, born 13 April 1929 in Fosston in Polk County, Minnesota, passed in Idaho on 9 June 2016 at age 87. He was buried at Riverview Cemetery in Coeur d'Alene in Kootenai County, Idaho, with Marilyn.

  1. Howard and Hattie, living in Coeur d'Alene in 1930, had no children after 9 years of marriage.
  2. Howard and Hattie are still living together in Coeur d'Alene in 1938 but are residing at separate addresses in 1940.
  3. Faye married L.J. Mathews in Spokane in February 1934.
  4. Marilyn was born in Spokane in December 1934.
  5. Faye appears to have separated by 1937 but she continued to work in Spokane until at least 1941.
  6. Marilyn is with Sadie in a set of circa 1936-1937 photographs with other members of the Baldwin family, and Bill Wetherall and his fiancee, Orene Hardman, and her mother, Ullie Hardman (see above). The photographs were taken in St. Maries, where Ellen Baldwin, Sadie (Baldwin) Williams, Clifford and Meda (Baldwin) Ure, and Bill Wetherall, were then living.
  7. On 23 March 1942, an application for a delayed certificate of birth in Knoxville, Iowa, in 1906, signed on 19 March 1942 by Faye Williams Nelson and notarlized in St. Maries, is recorded in Iowa.
  8. On 26 October 1944, Faye M. Nelson marries Howard C. Rebenstorf in Missoula in Missoula County, Montana. Both had been married and divorced, and both were then residing in Coeur d'Alene.
  9. By 1947, Faye and Howard living in Coeur d'Alene.
  10. Marilyn A. Mathews married Norman K. Disrud in [Coeur d'Alene] in Kootenai County, Idaho, on 24 August 1957.
Marilyn's family history work

In December 1973, the Wetherall family spent a few days in Lewiston, Idaho for a Christmas reunion with Orene's relatives. On Christmas day, Faye, Marilyn, Norman, and Todd drove down from Coeur d'Alene to visit with the Wetheralls at their motel for a couple of hours. Orene's mother Ullie, who also knew Faye and had met several other relatives on Bill's Baldwin side, and Orene's sister Babe, who had met Faye, were also there.

Marilyn kept in touch with the Wetheralls in Grass Valley after Faye's death in 1995, and until sometime after Orene's death in 2003. Around 1979, she sent my father some family information that survives among his papers. I have not yet had an opportunity to see it. It may answer some questions and raise others. It may partly account for the extent and quality of the information my father conveyed to me about his ancestors when talking to me about them in 2010 and 2011.

Top  

Claude Claude Jennings Williams birth certificate
Mother Sarah Elizabeth Baldwin, father Chas. F. Williams
Scan of copy in Wetherall Family Collection
Claude Claude J. Williams, circa 1926
Grumbal Studio, Seward Nebraska portrait
Wetherall Family Collection
Claude

Claude Jennings Williams [Draft] Registration Card
D.S.S. (Department of Selective Service) Form 1
Local Board, St. Maries, 16 October 1940

Duplicate issued 10/11/45   Discharged
typed in top margin of card

Card states that Claude was unemployed

Find a Grave memorial states
"Enlistment Date: 15 February 1942"
"Release Date: 1 October 1945"

Images copped from Ancestry.com

Claude

Claude J. Williams (1907-1977)

Claude Williams has left relatively few traces of his existence. Like Aunt Sadie and Faye, he was well known to the Wetherall-Hardman family in both Idaho and California.

My father, William Bascom Wetherall, partly grew up with Claude and Faye when the three children were living with their Baldwin grandparents in St. Maries, Idaho, during the early 1910s.

Faye was born in Knoxville, Iowa, where the Baldwin-Steele family lived for a while after leaving Kentucky. Ida Mae Baldwin met William Riley Wetherall, my future paternal grandparents, during this stay in Knoxville in 1906. Claude was born the following year in Lincoln, Nebraska, the next stop on the Baldwin-Steele northwest migration.

Both Faye and Claude later lived with their mother in Seward, Nebraska, near Utica, where Lydia Margaret Baldwin had settled with her husband Charles Andrew Anstine. The Anstine farm was a sort of midwest port for Baldwin-Steele family members. Martha Ellen Baldwin stayed with Lydia for a while and helped care for the Anstine girls for a while after Lydia died in 1929, and my father worked on Uncle Charlie's farm during summers while going to high school in Des Moines in the mid 1920s.

My father remained in touch with the Anstine sisters later in life. Claude, too, was close to his Anstine cousins and is known to have visited them during his travels.

After serving in the Navy during the Pacific War, Claude lived mainly in Spokane, where he had partly grown up. Spokane is geographically close to St. Maries, where my father lived with Aunt Meda's family, and with Grandma Baldwin, while attending college in Moscow, Idaho. After my father began courting my mother, who he met at college in Moscow, his Baldwin relatives in St. Maries, and Aunt Sadie and Faye and Claude, who were then in Spokane, had opportunities to meet my mother and her parents and relatives, who lived in Peck and elsewhere in the Lewiston-Clarkston area, which is close to St. Maries, Coeur d'Alene, and Spokane.

Claude appears in a number of photographs in the Wetherall family collection in California, and in photographs in the possession of Lydia Anstine's great granddaughter, Darci Severns, in Washington.

Claude's military service

Several photographs in the Wetherall and Severns family collections show Claude the uniform of a U.S. Navy sailor. The Severns Family Collection includes photographs he took in China after the end of the Pacific War. The Wetherall Family Collection includes a novelty souvenir associated with China (see Baldwin-Steele Galleries below).

Claude registered for Selective Service in St. Maries on 16 October 1940 (right) and appears to have enlisted on 15 February 1942. He seems to have served until sometime in October 1945 -- a month or so after Japan formally surrendered in Tokyo on 2 September 1945, and 2 months or so after 15 August 1945 when Japan agreed to surrender and ended hostilities. U.S. and other Allied warships began entering Chinese ports during late August, and it appears that Claude was able to go ashore.

The nature of Claude's service in the Nave is not clear. He was reportedly involved in construction with a Seabees unit. However, I have seen no military records.

Claude's death

When beginning to flesh out this family history after my father died in 2013, I was able to confirm the date and place of Claude's death but not the disposition of his remains. Baldwin-Steele cousins I crossed paths with in Washington, who had either known him or heard of him, and had seen photographs of him in their family albums, said they didn't know where he was buried.

Then on 4 March 2021, I found a Find a Grave memorial that had been created on 11 September 2019 by Peter Joseph ("PJ") Braun, a U.S. Navy veteran and member of MIAP -- Missing In America Project -- the mission of which is to locate unclaimed cremains of veterans and render them proper military honors. MIAP volunteers found Claude's cremains "sitting on the shelf" in the "Community Storage" vault in Seattle's Lake View Cemetery, and facilitated their transfer to a columbarium at Washington State Veterans Cemetery in Medical Lake in Washington. See Baldwin-Steele graves (below for an image of his memorial plaque and other particulars.

Claude Williams with Orene Hardman Claude Williams with Orene Wetherall
Picnic outing (unknown place and date)
(Wetherall Family photo)
Claude Williams with Aura and Lennie Baldwin-Steele 1st cousins
Claude Williams with Aura (L) and Lennie (R) Anstine
On leave mid-1940s (place uncertain)
(Severns Family photo)
Claude China novelty Claude China novelty

Claude Williams (1907-1977), funny man

Photo booth strip photo and "Jewish Navy" membership novelty sent to nephew William B. Wetherall after the Pacific War
Claude served the U.S. Navy and his ship docked in a Chinese port shortly after hostilities ended
The "valentine" from "Pekin" was among my father's collection of Baldwin-Steele family detritus
Wetherall Family Collection

Claude cards

Claude's personal cards
The first card is associated with
the circa 1926 portrait (above)
Wetherall Family Collection

Claude San Francisco Claude

Claude visits Wetheralls, February 1951
1558 33rd Avenue, San Francisco
Jerry (left), Claude holding Mary Ellen,
Billy (this writer) in back
Wetherall Family Collection

Claude

Snapshop of Claude circa early 1970s
Claude's "Richard Burton" caption on back
Claude died in Seattle in 1977
Wetherall Family Collecion

Top  

5.2 Meda's children

Greta and Harlan Lemmer

Greta and Harlan Celebrate 50th Anniversary
The Spokesman-Review, Sunday, 30 August 1981, C4
Clipped from Newspapers.com

Greta and Harlan Lemmer

50th anniversary portrait
Image from granddaughter Patricia Santa Rosa-Flint

Greta and Harlan Lemmer

50th anniversary portrait
Scan of print in Wetherall Family Collection

Greta (Ure) Lemmer (1912-1999)

Greta Ava Ure, born and raised in St. Maries (see Table 5.3), married Harlan Lemmer, whose parents had also settled in St. Maries during the 1920s.

William Harlan Lemmer (1904-1985)

William Harlan Lemmer was born on 13 September 1904 in Antigo, Langrad County, Wisconsin, to William F. Lemmer and Lina L. Freese.

The 1910 and 1920 censuses show the Lemmers, including Harlan's older sister Cecilia, living in Hope, Bonner County, Idaho, where William Lemmer, the father, is working as a saw filer at a lumber mill. The 1930 census shows Harlan's parents, William Lemmer (57) and Lena L. Lemmer (49), living without their children in St. Maries, Idaho, where Harlan's father is working as a saw filer in logging. The Lemmers were born in Wisconsin, he to a German father and Pennsylvania mother, she to a German father and German mother.

The 1930 census, enumerated in April, shows Harlan as William H. Lemmer (25), married at age 18, working as a saw filer at a lumber mill in Emmett, in the South Precinct of Gem County, Idaho. He and his parents were born in Wisconsin, and he was boarding at a boarding house.

Greta's marriage

A marriage return filed in Asotin County, Washington, certifies that, on 7 September 1931, Greta Ava Ure (19) -- a spinster stenographer, born in St. Maries, Idaho, to Iowa-born C.M. Ure and Kentucky-born Almeta [sic = Almeda, Meda] Baldwin -- married William Harlan Lemmer (26) -- a divorced salesman, born in Intiago [sic = Antigo], Wisconsin, to W.F. Lemmer and Lena Freese, both born in Wisconsin. He signed "Harlan Lemmer" and she signed "Mrs. Harlan Lemmer".

The 1939-1940 city directory for Rexburg, Idaho, shows Harlan Lemmer (spouse Greta A.) working as a chauffeur for the Shell Oil Company.

The 1940 census shows "Wm. H. Lemmer" (35) and Greta (27) living in St. Anthony, in Fremont County, Idaho, where he was working as a salesman of gas and oil, and she as a clerk at a county agency. At the time they had two children, a son Harlan (6) and a daughter Lois (6/12). William had completed 3 years of college and Greta 4 years of high school. According to the census, the Lemmers were living in St. Maries in 1935, but had moved to Fremont County by the time Lois was born in 1939.

By 1950, Greta and her family were living in Spokane, where they are listed in the city directory at an address next door to Greta's parents, Meda and Clifford Ure. Later, Greta and [William] Harlan would reside on Hawthorne Street in the northern part of Spokane with their children, Harlan E. [Eugene] "Gene" Lemmer (see below) and Lois C. Friedlander (see below).

The 1950 Spokane directory shows Mrs. Greta Lemmer working as a bookkeeper for Soft Water Service Co., and Harlan Lemmer (Greta) working as a clerk for an unspecified employer. She is residing at 723 [sic] Knox Avenue, and his (her) home is at W. 733 [sic] Knox Avenue. [Presumably the two Knox addresses are meant to be the same.] Clifford M. Ure (Meda J.) are listed as living [apparently] next door at W. 731 Knox Avenue. H. Dale Ure (Carol L.), a clerk for an unspecified employer, are living at E. 1311 Bismark Avenue.

By 1955 or 1956, Greta and Harlan moved into a home at 4928 N. Hawthorne Street, where they would live the rest of their lives.

The 1960 Spokane directory lists Mrs. Greta A. Lemmer as an office manager for Soft Water Service, and as the spouse of William H. Lemmer (Greta A.), a salesman for Headlight Oil. Meda (Baldwin) Ure is residing at S. 206 Post. Lois C. (Lemmer) Santa Rosa is listed as a typist for Pacific Telephone, and as the spouse of Arth [Arthur Anthony] Santa Rosa, of Santa Rosa's Body & Fender Works, which is separately listed as a shop owned by Arth Santa Rosa. The Santa Rosas are residing at E. 1207 Rich Avenue. Arther Anthony Angelo Santa Rosa, born in Idaho on 21 June 1936 to Italian immigrants, passed away on 30 April 2016.

Harlan's stroke

William Harlan Lemmer appears to have suffered from a serious stroke or a series of strokes in the late 1960s or very early 1970s, according to Faye Rebenstorf, Greta's 1st cousin. Faye described their difficulties in some detail in a coversation over dinner at a restaurant in Chinatown in San Francisco on 5 September 1973, with my parents, William B. and L. Orene Wetherall, my brother, me, and my then wife Etsuko. Faye's daughter, Marilyn, sent the tape to my parents after Faye died in 1995, and I digitized it in 2013.

Faye related that Harlan was able to hear and understand everything you said to him, but he couldn't speak well enough to make himself understood. Apparently he'd get angry when people didn't understand him and become beligerent toward them. He'd gotten to the point that he didn't like seeing anyone, didn't want people to come to their place, and didn't want to go any place. He shuffled around with the help of a cane but couldn't use his right hand very well. Fortunately, though, he was left-handed.

Faye occasionally had business in Spokane and would have liked to take Greta out to lunch. But Greta, who had a full-time job, went home every day at noon -- a five-mile drive -- to make Harlan's lunch. And Faye said, in 1973, that frankly she did not want to visit Greta when Harlan was there because of his belligerence.

Faye also said, in 1973, that she had last visited Greta and Harlan at their summer home in a resort town on the other side of Lake Pend Oreille, about 60 miles from Coeur d'Alene (where Faye lived), and 100 miles from Spokane (where Greta and Harlan lived). Greta had put in a garden there and drove up every weekend to see that everything was watered. The home was in the vicinity of Hope in Bonner County, Idaho, where Harlan had grown up and worked after his family moved to Idaho from Wisconsin.

50th anniversary

Greta and Harlan celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in 1981.

Harlan passed away in Spokane on 1 May 1985. Greta passed away on 9 October 1999. They are buried at Hope Cemetery in East Hope, Bonner County, Idaho, on the northeastern shore of Lake Pend Oreille.

In 2000, their son Harlan Lemmer (Harlan Eugene "Gene" Lemmer), and the Greta A. Lemmer Estate, granted a quit claim deed on the 2-bedroom, 1-bath house and 6,200 square-foot lot at 4928 N. Hawthorne Street in Spokane, where Greta and Harlan had lived out their lives. They had moved from their Knox Street home to the Hawthorne Street home in 1955 or 1956.

Harlan Eugene Lemmer Gene Lemmer, 1951
Scan of color version of
high school yearbook portrait
Image from his niece Patricia Flint
Harlan Eugene Lemmer Gene Lemmer, 1951
North Central High School
Spokane, Washington
(Tamarack 1950-1952 yearbook)
Harlan Eugene Lemmer Gene Lemmer, 1959
State College of Washington
Pullman, Washington
(Chinook 1959 yearbook)

Gene Lemmer (1933-2014)

Harlan Eugene Lemmer was born on 4 September 1933 in St. Maries, Idaho. The 1940 census shows him living in St. Maries with his parents, Greta and Harlan Lemmer, and his sister Lois.

Gene graduated from North Central High School in Spokane in 1951. The Tamarack 1950-1951 yearbook states that he liked math, had transferred from Coeur d'Alene, and played football and belonged to the Spanish Club among several other activities (page 54). He graduated from the State College of Washington in Pullman in 1959 with a degree in mechanical engineering (Chinook '59 yearbook, page 81).

In the conversation she taped while dining with the Wetherall family -- in Chinatown, San Francisco, on 4 September 1973 -- Faye Rebenstorf said that Gene and Pat Lemmer and their 5 children had visited Greta and Harlan that summer. She characterized Gene as a good son.

William B. Wetherall, who also knew Greta's son as Gene, said during the 1973 conversation that he had never met Pat. He knew they were settled in southern California and asked Faye if Gene was working in electronics. Faye didn't know but thought he was working for Kaiser, and she said they were doing well.

Orene Wetherall, who had a talent for connecting disparate dots in casual conversations, observed that, with 5 kids, it's good to do well.

Gene and Patricia settled in Upland, California. They celebrated their 50th wedding anniversity in 2013. Patricia reported that Gene had been in California for 54 years and had worked for Kaiser Steel, and that they had 5 children, 14 grandchildren, and 2 great grand children (email, 21 January 2014).

Gene passed away on 14 December 2014 after a long bout with Parkinson's disease.

Eugene Lemmer Gene Lemmer

Obituary

Harlan Eugene (Gene) Lemmer
September 4, 1933 - December 8, 2014

Gene Lemmer, 81, passed away on December 8, 2014. He is survived by Pat, his loving wife of fifty-one years, his children Cindy (James), Debbie (Steve), Chere, Jim (Deborah) and Sam (Jim), as well as fourteen grandchildren, two great-grandchildren, and his sister, Lois.

The family would like to thank the VNA Hospice, who were a great source of comfort to Gene and the family in his final days.

Services will be held at St. Joseph's Church at 12:00 p.m. on Saturday, January 10, 2015.

In lieu of flowers, Memorial donations may be made to VNA Hospice of Claremont.

Published in Inland Valley Daily Bulletin on Jan. 6, 2015.

Lois (Lemmer) (Santa Rosa) Slater

Lois, Gene's sister, was born on 17 October 1939 in St. Anthony in Fremont County, Idaho. Washington marriage records show that she married Arthur A. Santa Rosa on 16 November 1957 (license 15 November, recorded 22 November) in Spokane. The signing witnesses were Marilyn Disrud and Edward Santa Rosa. Marilyn, nee Rebenstorf (originally Mathews), was Faye (Williams) (Nelson) (Mathews) Rebenstorf's daughter, hence Lois's and this writer's 2nd cousin.

Lois reported to this writer that she married Arthur A. Santa Rosa in 1957 after graduating from high school at age 18, and between 1959 and 1966 they had 4 children -- Brenda, Shelly Ann, Bret Anthony, and Patricia Sue. Lois later married a man named Friedlander, then in 1990 she married Jerry Slater, who had a daughter Bonnie and a son Warner. Lois has 12 grandchildren, including those of Warner's 2 children (email, 8 February 2014).

Lois Slater is my 2nd cousin. Her daughter, Patricia Sue Santa Rosa, a 3rd cousin of my children, married Roger W. Flint in Spokane, Washington, on 22 August 1987 and they have 2 children, Michael and Ashley, who are 4th cousins of my grandchildren.

DNA connections

On 26 December 2020 I received email from my son, Tsuyoshi Sugiyama, with an attachment of a "DNA Ethnicity Estimate & Health Report", the result of a "My Heritage DNA" test. I had not had such a test and had never discussed such tests with him. He did this on his own. Out of curiosity, I immediately ordered a similar test.

Then on New Years Day 2021, in Japan where live, Tsuyoshi sent me a screen capture of a message he had received from "Patricia Santa Rosa", apparently sent on New Years Eve 2020, from America where she lives. The message began like this -- "Dear Tsuyoshi, / I was happy to see a dna match from Japan this morning. I knew immediately that it was likely you or your sister." Patricia then introduced herself as "Patricia Santa Rosa-Flint" and said she was a "distant cousin" -- which translates straight-up 3rd cousin, though as relatives they are also an ocean and generation apart.

I sent Tsuyoshi a summary of the parallel lines of descent in his and Patricia's branches of the Baldwin-Steele family. I have also been in touch with descendants of the keeper of the family history keys in the other two lines -- Todd Disrud and Darci Severns -- as follows.

0.    Baldwin-Howard              Steele-Grubb
   John R. ___ Margaret        Jonas ___ Elizabeth
   Baldwin  |  Howard          Steele |  Grubb 
            |                         |
            |     Baldwin-Steele      |
1.       Newton                    Martha
         Bascum __________________ Ellen 
         Baldwin        |          Steele
       _________________|_______________________
      |             |             |             |
2. Sada          Lydia         Almeda        Ida         
   Elizabeth     Margaret      Jane          Mae
   Baldwin       Baldwin       Baldwin       Baldwin
   (Williams)    (Anstine)     (Ure)         (Wetherall
      |             |             |             |
3. Faye          Lennie        Greta         William
   Marguerite    Lee           Ava           Bascom 
   Williams      Anstine       Ure           Wetherall
   (Mathews)     (Severns)     (Lemmer)         |  
   (Nelson)         |             |             | 
   (Rebenstorf)     |             |             | 
      |             |             |             | 
4. Marylin       Tex           Lois          William
   Anne          Lee           Cecelia       Owen
   Mathews       Severns       Lemmer        Wetherall
   (Disrud)         |          (Santa Rosa)     |
      |             |          (Friedlander)    |_____________
      |             |          (Slater)         |             |
      |             |             |             |             |
      |        Baldwin-Steele 3rd cousins       |  Siblings   |
      |             |             |             |             |
5. Todd          Darci         Patricia      Saori         Tsuyoshi   
   Lee           Eileen        Sue           Orene         Owen 
   Disrud        Severns       Santa Rosa    Wetherall     Wetherall
      |             |          (Flint)       Sugiyama      Sugiyama
      |             |             |          -> Ogawa 
      |             |             |          -> Sugiyama
      |             |             |          -> Kasubuchi
      |             |             |             |_____________ 
      |             |             |             |             |        
6. Children      Children      Children      Anri             | 
                                             Ogawa            | 
                                             -> Sugiyama   Tatsuki
                                             -> Kasubuchi  Kasubuchi

A century ago, descendants of families that didn't migrate might actually have known some of their 3rd cousins. When I was growing up, I barely knew my 1st cousins. A few years ago, I began to cross paths with various degrees of cousins I had never heard of, but might have known had our grandparents and parents now scattered all over the map and fallen out of touch.

DNA tests appear to be credible as measures of possible genetic connections down lines of biological descent. 3rd cousin matches seem to be fairly reliable, and reliability increases up the kinship chart, to the point that matches with half and full siblings, and parents, approach 100 percent certainty.

But contrary to the claims of companies that market DNA tests for ancestry purposes, DNA is not a measure of "ethnicity" or "heritage" -- which are social, not chemical, conditions.

See Tsuyoshi's misleading "Ethnicity Estimate" under DNA tests in the article on Cherokee blood, below,
which looks at claims of Native American ancestry in the quagmire of "identity politics".

Top  

Herbert Dale Ure (1928-2004)

H. Dale Ure, William B. Wetherall's 1st cousin, married Carol Trappe on the evening of 30 April 1949 (Spokane Chronicle, Saturday, 30 April 1949, page 14) at St. John's Lutheran Church in Spokane. The bridegroom was described as the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Ure, W731 Knox Street, Spokane. The ushers included James Trappe (a brother of the bride), and Gene Lemmer (Harlan Eugene Lemmer, Dale's nephew, then about 15 years old). Those assisting at the reception included Mrs. Harlan Lemmer (Dale's sister Greta) and Miss Lois Lemmer (Greta's daughter, Gene's sister, and Dale's niece, then about 9 years old).

Dale and Carol visit San Francisco

In May 1950, a year after they married, Dale and Carol visited the Wetherall family in San Francisco. A picture postcard showing "The Golden Trail, Scotch Broom in Blossom, Oregon Coast Highway" is addressed to "The Wetheralls' / 1558 33 Ave. / San Francisco / California". A standard green 1-cent Washington stamp is postmarked Florence, Oregon, 20 May 1950. Carol wrote the following message.

Memories of California
Dear folks, Sat.
    Tonite we sho
uld
be thru Portland anyhow
(Just my luck . . . no more
ink.) Now we are
anxious to get home.
Everything we now
see seems very insignificant
with the memories of
S.F. still so fresh. We
surely hated to leave
Calif. yesterday. No doubt
some day we will be
living down there
somewhere if we have
our say. We have been
making fine time and
the weather is as sunny
& clear as can be. The
scotch broom is out just
like that as well as
masses of rhododendron.
Will let you know
as soon as we reach home.
    Love, Carol & Dale
Memories of San Francisco
Memories of San Francisco

Picture postcards

Picture postcards were the contemporary equivalents of text messages with attached images -- except that postcard messages were anything but instant. You needed, first of all, a postcard. And a pen with ink or a sharp pencil or both. And a proper stamp. And then you had to find a post box -- and trust that the card would be picked, routed, and delivered in two or three days -- rain or shine, snow or sleet.

This writer began to collect picture postcards, beginning those I got from my maternal grandmother and parents, in my early teens, growing up in San Francisco during the early 1950s. I usually wrote my name "Bill Wetherall" at the tops of cards I added to my collection with the intention of keeping them. I did this to make sure that other people, particularly classmates and neighbors with whom I traded stamps and postcards, knew who they belonged to. I never got higher than a complimentary "C" in penmanship. After learning the art of printing in high school and college drafting classes, I lost the ability to write in longhand other than to sign my name. Notes and memos I write for myself are always odd mixtures of printing and cursive.

Dale's and Carol's obituaries

Dale and Carol would live the rest of their lives in Spokane.

The following is a cut and paste of an obituary re-posted by Ancestor.com from SpokesmanReview.com. The obituary reportedly appeared in the 10 July 2004 edition of the paper but the copy on the website shows 9 July 2004. It was probably run in the classifieds on both days.

The Spokesman-Review
Friday, July 9, 2004

Dale Ure
Spokane

Memorial service for H. Dale Ure, 75, will be at a later date. Heritage Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Mr. Ure, who died Saturday, was born in St. Maries.

He worked for 40 years in various aspects of advertising for Cowles Publishing Co. He was advertising sales manager for the Northwest Unit Farm Magazines when he retired.

Mr. Ure and his wife worked in Lutheran Marriage Encounter for many years.

He was also an avid Scouter for 35 years, including service as Explorer post adviser in Great Falls and scoutmaster of Boy Scout Troop 313 in Spokane.

He received the Silver Beaver and Order of the Lamb awards for his work with youths.

Survivors include his wife of 55 years, Carol; 4 children, Doug Ure of Salem, Ore., Diane Richards and Jan Christensen, both of Spokane, and Wendy Davis of Spangle; and six grandchildren.

Memorial contributions may be made to Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church.

Dale's wife, Carol Louise (Trappe) Ure, born on 6 November 1928, apparently in Spokane, passed away in Spokane on 9 April 2010. Her obituary was published in the classified ads section of The Spokesman-Review from 14-15 April 2010, according to the following Legacy.com version. The portrait was published with the obituary. The caption below the portrait, and the portrait's approximate date, are mine. The date is based on information in the image's file name.

Dale and Carol Ure Dale and Carol Ure
Circa 1988

The Spokesman-Review
April 14-15, 2010

Carol L. Ure
Spokane

URE, Carol L. (Age 81) Now with her Lord, Christ Jesus as of April 9, 2010. She was preceded in death by Dale, husband of 55 years. Wife, mother, homemaker, journalist and elementary teacher, she is survived by their four children and six grandchildren. Memorial Service 10:00 AM Saturday April 17, 2010 at Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church, 4320 S. Conklin St., Spokane 99203. Flowers accepted and donations in Carol's name should be made to Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church or Lutheran Marriage Encounter.

The 4 surviving children as of the time of the above obituary were Douglas Ure of Salem, Oregon; Diane Richards and Janice (Jan) Christensen, both of Spokane, Washington; and Wendy Davis of Spangle, Washington.

Douglas Ure (1950-2014)

Douglas Ure, born on 31 July 1950, died on 28 January 2014. He had been an instructor at Chemeketa Community College in Salem, Oregon. He taught courses in life sciences, and his research interests were vertebrate biology and terrestrial and forest ecology.

Douglas Ure Douglas C. Ure

In loving memory

Douglas C. Ure
July 31, 1950 - January 28, 2014

SALEM – Douglas C. Ure, a lifelong teacher, died due to complications with cancer on Tuesday, January 28, with his family at his side.

He was born July 31, 1950, in Spokane, Washington. He was preceded in death by a son, Andrew, and his parents, Dale and Carol Ure. He is survived by his wife, Susan, and two additional sons, David and Jamie, and three sisters, Diane Richards, Janice Christensen, and Wendy (Steve) Davis.

Doug taught 17 years at Chemeketa Community College, teaching a variety of science classes; his favorite was the non-majors biology. His lifelong love of scouting led to a personal achievement of Eagle Scout that he also helped his sons to achieve. He became a Cub Master for younger scouts, then a Scout Master, thus giving 17 years of service in Salem. He also helped start a community garden in Salem. He was active in his church and especially loved acting in a variety of religious plays. In the summer time, he and his family vacationed at Flathead Lake in Montana.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations to the Boy Scouts Troop 108 or Marion County Food Shares. Services for Doug will be at 2:00 PM on Sunday, February 16, 2014 at Our Savior’s Lutheran Church, 1770 Baxter Road SE. Arrangements by Virgil T. Golden Funeral Service.

Top  

5.3 Lydia's children

Anstine sisters

William B. Wetherall's 1st cousins

Lydia and Charley Anstine had 4 daughters -- Velma, Lydia, Aura, and Imogene -- between 1908 and 1926. Velma, Lydia, and Aura were spaced about two years apart. Imogene came 14 years later. Their lives reflect the difficulties of a farming family that didn't own its own land, had only daughters, and more than its share of early death.

Velma

Velma would die when she was 10 years old. Darci Severns sheds light on the circumstances surrounding Velma's death (email, 16 November 2013).

My mom and I both recall Lennie [Velma's younger sister, Darci's paternal grandmother] referring to an Aunt Sadie. We never heard Sally. I strongly believe Aunt Sadie was present when Velma had her appendix removed. As I recall grandma said, "Mother's sister was a nurse and saw that Velma's appendix was small, pink, and healthy. It had been removed unnecessarily. Velma then died from an infection she received due to the surgery." So tragic!

Velma was "Thelma Anstine" on her death certificate. The place of death was Seward City in Seward County in Nebraska. The medical certificate of death, signed by B.E. Morrow, M.D., stated she died at 12:30 [12:20?] am on 27 May 1919 [Tuesday]. The cause of death was "Ether pneumonia" and the contributory (secondary) cause was "Acute apendicitis". The personal and statistical particulars describe her as a white, single female who was born in Seward County on 30 November 1908 to "Charlie Anstine" born in Nebraska and "Lydia Baldwin" born in Kentucky. She was 10 years 3 months and 27 days old at the time of her death. The informant's name was "Charlie Anstine" of Utica, Nebraska. She was buried on 28 May 1919 in Utica.

"Ether pneumonia" and "ether bronchitis" -- also called "operative" pneumonia and bronchitis -- are possible side effects of ether when administered as an anesthetic in especially abdominal operations, or when inhaled in an industrial plant. Ether, and the sort of impurities that commonly found in ether in the past, can irritate the bronchial membranes and reduce pulmonary resistance to viral and bacterial infections.

Lennie and Aura

Lennie and Aura, having lost their older sister when they were 9 and 7, would go to college in Lincoln, Nebraska, and become teachers. Darci Severns, Lennie's granddaughter, says this about her great aunt Aura's academic standing (email, 19 November 2013).

Aura graduated from high school 5/29/29 [29 May 1929] from Seward High. She was the pick of the school.

Imogene was born a year before Lydia had a colostomy for colon cancer. She was going on 3 when Lydia died in 1929, and had turned 6 shortly before Charley died in 1932. She was then raised in Lennie's family.

Lennie married Archie Severns in 1931, and Archie moved into the Anstine family to help his father-in-law run the farm. Lennie, who had been helping raise Imogene after their mother (Lydia) died, continued to raise her with her own children after their father (Charley) died. Lennie and Archie took Imogene with them when they left the farm in Nebraska in 1937 for an entirely different life in Washington.

Aura married George M. Dey, also from Utica. The 1940 census shows them still living in Utica, where both were employed in government work, he as an "over-seer" in road construction, she as a "clerk" at the post office. By 1942 they were living in Idaho, probably in Coeur d'Alene. They would later live in Spokane, Washington, and also in Riverside, California.

An Army enlistment record shows that, on 21 January 1943, George M. Dey, born in Nebraska in 1907, then residing in Kootenai County, Idaho, enlisted in Spokane, Washington. He is said to have had 3 years of high school, been employed as a foreman in construction, been married, and was 70 inches tall and weighed 146 pounds. The nature of his military service is not clear.

Imogene

Imogene Anstine had completed 1 year of high school (H-1) by the 1940 census, when she was 13 years old and living with Lennie and Archie Severns in Washington. She graduated from high school around 1943, and by 1945 she had married a local boy, Keith R. LeBaron (1925-2011), and they would have two children. She passed away in 2005, and he died 6 years later.

Darci Severns reported that Aura and George Dey resided in Spokane, while Imogene and Keith LeBaron were denizens of Seattle and then Federal Way. They were snowbirds, she said, hence their occasional stays in Southern California. (Email, 16 November 2013)

Only Velma is buried with Lydia and Charley in Nebraska. Lennie is buried with Archie in Washington. Imogene is also buried in Washington, presumably with Keith. Aura died in California, apparently during one of their sojourns there, and George reportedly died in Spokane. Apparently Aura and George were cremated, and presumably their ashes are in Washington.

Top  


Educating daughters

Lennie (Anstine) Severns wrote in the early 1980s that, after high school, she attended the University of Nebraska, received a teaching certificate, and taught 3 years in a one-room country school while also teaching piano and violin on weekends. The 1930 census shows both Lennie and Aura as public school teachers when they were respectively 20 and 18 years old. However, the 1940 census shows that they had completed only 4 years of high school.

1930 census shows Charles Anstine (46), widowed, his daughters Lennie (20), Aura (18), and Imogene (3 6/12), and his mother-in-law Ellen Baldwin (66), also widowed, living on the Anstine farm in Utica. Both Lennie and Aura are still single, and both are teachers in a public school.

1940 census shows William A. Severns (33), head of household, with Lennie (30), his wife, their two children, Tex Lee (6) and and Billie Rae (3), and Imogene Anstine as Archie's sister-in-law. They are living in Skookumchuck, Lewis County, Washington, were Archie is the owner of a general store and Lennie is a store helper. The census states that that they living in Utica, Seward, Nebraska in 1935. According to the census, Archie and Lennie had completed 4 years of high school (H-4).

1940 census shows "George Day" [sic = Dey] (32) and Aura (28) living in Utica in a non-farm home they rented for 12 dollars a month. They were living in a different home (or in different homes) in Seward in 1935. Both were employed in government work, he as an "over-seer" in road construction, she as a "clerk" at the post office. He earned earned 1,200 dollars and she 600 dollars a year. George had completed 3 years (H3) and Aura 4 years (H4) of high school.

This does not rule out the possibility -- or likelihood -- that Lennie and Aura completed a series of teacher-training courses of a normal school at the University of Nebraska.

Nebraska, like other more recently settled states with numerous sparsely populated communities in many counties, had many 1-room and 2-room schools to which local farm children commuted fairly long distances. School buses made commutes somewhat easier and also facilitated the building of larger schools to serve larger areas. Teacher education varied from county to county, but as in most states, high school graduates were able to became teachers with relatively little formal training.

At the time, there were a variety of normal schools in the state. Some programs ran as short as 6 weeks, others 1, 2, and even 4 years. Possibly the program Lennie and Aura completed did not qualify as "college education" for census purposes.

Lennie, already very busy during her mother's illness and after her mother's death in the late 1920s, would have been even busier as a farm wife after marrying in 1931. She was then 21, and if she had been teaching for 3 years before she married, then she would have been 18 when she began teaching -- the same age as Aura was when said to have been teaching in the 1930 census. Thus suggests that the two girls graduated from high school when 17 or so, then completed short teacher certification courses.

Lennie and Aura didn't teach for long in Nebraska, and they didn't teach after for the Northwest. Had they wanted to teach in Washington or Idaho, they would probably have need to localize their credentials. Even today, credentialing standards considerably vary from state to state, like practically all other standards. Like lawyers and doctors, and people in many other regulated vocations, migrating teachers usually have to satisfy local standards before they can practice their trade.

Reflecting the importance of education in Lennie's own upbringing, though, both of her children became certified teachers in Washington, where they were entirely schooled.

Education in the Steele-Grubb and Baldwin-Steele families

Lydia Anstine appears to have continued the tradition, established by her Baldwin parents, to invest as much as possible in her children's educations -- presumably to give them an edge in life. Census data clearly shows that education became increasingly important in the lives of Lennie's and Aura's ancestors -- as it did, in fact, for most families in the United States and other industrializing and urbanizing countries.

20.0 percent of people 14 years old and older in the United States in 1870, according to data compiled from that year's census, were illiterate. The rates for 1880, 1890, and 1900 were 17.0, 13.3, and 10.7 percent.

Over 25 percent of all people over the age of 10 in Kentucky were unable to read or write in 1870. By 1900, Kentucky's illiteracy rate was down to 16.5 percent -- which made the state the second most literate state in the south following Texas. Still, about 1 in every 5 eligible voter could not read or write.

The Steele-Grubb family that produced Ellen Baldwin, Lydia Anstine's mother, appears to have been less literate than the average Kentucky family at the time, but may have been more literate than the average family in their neck of woods.

The 1850 census classified Elisabeth Steel [sic = Elizabeth Steele] (30), Lydia's maternal grandmother, as a "Person over 20 y'rs of age who cannot read & write". At the time she was raising the first 5 of the 10 children she would have before her husband, Jonas Steele, died in 1868.

The 1870 census classified Elisabeth [sic = Elizabeth] Steele (50), as a person who "Cannot write" but not as a person who "Cannot read". Apparently over the years since the 1850 census, Elizabeth (Grubb) Steele she had learned to read. In 1870, as the widowed head of her family, she was keeping house for the 7 children still living with her, including all of the youngest. The 1870 census shows that 4 of the children -- George (23) and James H. (21), both farmers, Nancy E. (15), and John W. (12), a farm hand -- could neither read nor write. Sarah H. (17) appears to have been literate. Mary J. (9) and Martha E. (6) -- the future Martha Ellen Baldwin, Lydia's mother -- were probably attending school, but appear to have been too young for the literacy items on the census.

For some reason, the "Attended school within the year" (Item 15) column on the two census sheets that included the Steele family is blank for everyone on the sheets. The "Cannot read" (Item 16) and "Cannot write" (Item 17) columns are blank for everyone under 10 years old. The two sheets include a few entirely illiterate families, in which both parents and all children over 9 were unable to either read or write.

The 1880 census oddly shows that Elizabeth Steele (59), keeping house, and Martha (15), at home, are unable to either read or write -- while the "Cannot read" and "Cannot write" columns remain unchecked for John W. (22), laborer, for whom both were checked in the 1870 census. On the same sheet, living apparently next door, Nancy E. Steele, now Nancy E. Brewer (24), keeping house for her laborer husband and their infant daughter, can still neither read nor right.

The 1900 census for the family of N.B. Baldwin (38) shows that everyone in the family -- himself (38), Ellen (36), and all 4 Baldwin sisters, ranging in age from 17 to 9 -- can both read and write. I cannot find our "John W." in the 1900 census.

Notwithstanding the inexplicable discrepancies in the above and other late-19th-century Steele-Grubb censuses, the sands of literacy in the family are shifting toward higher levels of literacy among the younger generations. By the middle of the 20th century, the average level of educational achievement for descendants of the family appear to be at par if not above the national average. Practically all descendants of Ellen Steele are finishing high school and going to vocational schools or colleges.

The 1940 census shows that Ellen Baldwin (76) had completed 8 years of schooling. The same census census shows that Sadie (Baldwin) Williams (57) had completed 22 years of college, while Meda (Baldwin) Ure (50) had finished 3 years of high school. Sadie had become a nurse. Meda, like her younger sister Ida, may have attended a business college.

So-called "business colleges" were vocational schools for training bookkeepers, accountants, typists, stenographers, office clerks, and cashiers. Such schools offered courses in subjects germane to such vocations, including business arithmetic, commercial law, typing, shorthand, penmanship, letter writing, English, spelling, and even geography. Most students completed programs at such schools in their early years were men, but by the start of the 20th century, the majority of typists and stenographers were women.

Whatever the conditions that prevented so many of her siblings from learning to read and write, Martha Ellen Steele would complete 8 years of grade school education in rural Kentucky before she married Newton Bascum Baldwin in 1880. And by the time they settled in St. Maries in 1910, all 4 of their children would finish 3 or 4 years of high school and a year or two of vocational school or college.

Education in the Hunter-Thomas and Hardman-Hunter families

By the late 19th century, the majority of grade school teachers were women. At the turn of the century, high school education was still a province of male teachers, but the ratio of female teachers was slowly increasing. Both trends reflected the recognition of the need for literate women in the non-farm labor force, as well as the view that women might be better suited for teaching, especially younger children.

My great grandmother, Ida (Thomas) Hunter, a farm wife in a sparsely populated region of Idaho that had no high school, arranged for her oldest daughter, Ullie Hunter, my maternal grandmother, to board in town so she could go to high school. In a taped conversation between my grandmother, mother and aunt, it was revealed that Ida was disappointed when Ullie -- rather than become a teacher -- married Owen Hardman, a semi-literate farm boy who had barely completed the 8th grade, and became a farm wife. Ullie made sure, with Owen's help, that their two daughters, my aunt and mother, went to high school in an era and a locality in which few young people went beyond the 8th grade.

My mother, Orene (Hardman) Wetherall, graduated from a country grade school and high school, before completing a 2-year normal school program at the University of Idaho. She then taught about 3 years at 2 different country schools in Idaho, the first a 1-room school with about a dozen students spanning all 8 grades. The 1940 census, two years after she had quit teaching and married, shows her as having completed 2 years of college (C-2). My father, who had graduated from law school after finishing an ordinary 4-year course at the University of Idaho, is shown to have completed 6 years of college (C-6).

My mother's Idaho credentials were out of date even in Idaho by the time she returned to teaching in California. She was allowed to do some home teaching to students who were sick, injured, or otherwise unable to attend classes. But even these opportunities were limited by her lack of a 4-year college degree and sufficient additional training under California certification laws. She would have had to go back to school, and take a number of methodology courses, to qualify as a teacher in California. Instead, she became the attendance secretary at the local high school. And a whole generation of local students came to appreciate the gracefulness of her discipline, and years later would greet her as Mrs. Wetherall when crossing paths with her in town.

Top  

5.22 Severns-Anstine

Lennie Lee (Anstine) and William Archie Severns

Table 5.22   Archie and Lennie (Anstine) Severns family
Table Name Birth Death Age Born Died Buried Vocation
0 William Archie Severns 12 Nov 1906 2 Jan 1991 84 Seward Co NE Centralia WA Claquato Cem WA Grocer
T 5.2 0 Lennie Lee (Severns) 9 Apr 1910 24 Sep 1997 87 Seward Co NE Centralia WA Claquato Cem WA Teacher
1 Imogene Joyce (LeBaron) 5 Sep 1926 11 Sep 2005 79 Seward Co NE Federal Way WA WA
2 Tex Lee Severns 21 Feb 1934 20 Aug 2006 72 Seward Co NE Seattle WA WA Teacher
3 Billie Rae (Dorland) 30 Nov 1936 Seward Co NE Teacher
  1. Lennie reported that she met Archie when she was a senior in high school 5 years before they married in 1931. Their granddaughter Darci, who wears the "promise ring" Archie gave Lennie, reports that "Lennie left the farm to attend the University of Nebraska to get her teaching certificate. 19 year old Archie put the promise ring on 16 year old Lennie's finger before she left." This would have been about 1926.
    Lennie also reported that Archie, a town boy, took over her father's farming business after his death in 1932. In 1937 the couple moved their family to Washington, where they bought a grocery store. The 1940 census shows Tex as the owner of a general store and Lennie as a store helper.
  2. Lennie reported that her baby sister Imogene was "hers" when their mother died in 1929 (see her autobiographical account below). Imogene married Keith LeBaron of Centralia, Washington in 1945. They lived in Seattle in the Queen Anne neighborhood. They would later live in Hemet, Riverside County, California, then in Federal Way, King County, Washington, where Imogene passed away in 2005. Keith died in Seattle in 2011.
  3. Tex became a teacher after graduating from the University of Washington. He married Eileen M. Greer in King County, Washington, on 8 June 1963, and they had two children, a daughter Darci and a son Blake.
  4. Billie became a teacher after graduating from the University of Washington. She married Donald Arthur Dorland in King County, Washington, on 9 July 1960, and they too had two children, a daughter Paige and a son Ty.

Top  

Lennie Severns's family saga

Lennie Lee (Anstine) Severns wrote a brief account of her life for the following publication.

Alma Nix and John Nix, editors
The History of Lewis County, Washington
Chehalis: Lewis County Historical Society, 1985
2 volumes, 464 plus 88 pages.
Hardcover numbered limited edition.
Illustrated with numerous b&w photographs
Volume 2 is a Pictorial Essay.

The following text is a reformatted version of Lennie's story from a text file created from scans of a part of this work and posted on USGenWeb Archives by Wesley Cox in February 2003. Lennie's account is found on page 326 in Part 9 of the 10-part work. The title is mine. The comments in (parentheses) are as received in the scanned version, but the comments in [brackets] are mine.

The photo of Lennie and Archie Severns in the original source was omitted in the USGenWeb Archives extract. The graduation portrait of Lennie, and the snapshots of Lennie, Archie, and Imogene with the children, Tex and Billie, belong to the Severns family. The scans were kindly provided by Lennie's granddaughter, Darci Severns, the Anstine-Severns family historian.

Lennie and Archie with Tex and Billie Lennie, Archie, Tex, and Billie
"We couldn't get Tex
off of that stump"

Circa 1937 possibly in Nebraska
before move to Washington
(Severns Family photo)
Lennie and Archie with Tex and Billie Imogene with Tex and Billie
"Billie always plays with your mouth
when she sucks her thumb
to go to sleep"

Circa 1937 possibly in Nebraska
before move to Washington
(Severns Family photo)

Lennie (Anstine) Severns's story

Charles and Lydia (Baldwin) Anstine were married, February 12, 1908, at Lincoln, Nebraska. They had 4 daughters: Velma (1908-1919), Lennie (myself) (1910-), Aura Dey (1912-1985), and Imogene LeBaron (1926-).

(photo): Lennie and Archie Severns [omitted]

My parents [Lydia Baldwin and Charley Anstine] met in Lincoln [Nebraska] when both were rooming at mom's sister's [Sadie (Baldwin) William's] home. Daddy was a railroad engineer and mom was attending [Lincoln] Business College. Their courtship was brief. The Baldwin family was moving to Spokane, Washington, and refused to let mother stay there because she was not married, even though [in 1907-1908] she was 21 years old. My, how times have changed!

My father and we girls were born and raised in Seward County, Nebraska. Mother and her family were from Kentucky, leaving there when mother was about 18 years old [about 1904].

After my parents' marriage, they left the city (at mom's insistence) to become successful farmers and cattle feeders. They continued to farm until cancer claimed their lives. Mother was 43 [when she died in 1929] and daddy died three years later [in 1932], at age 48. Imogene [born in 1926] was 2 years old and I was nineteen [when mother died]. She was "mine" from that day on.

I rode horseback to attend a two-room country school (grades 1-10), during which time I took private piano and violin lessons. Our small high school in Utica [in Seward County] did not have a music department, so my parents decided to send me to Seward High School where I could continue to study music. After high school, I attended the University of Nebraska, received my teaching certificate, taught 3 years in a one-room country school, and taught piano and violin on weekends.

W.A. "Archie" Severns and I met when I was a senior in high school [in 1926]. We were married five years later in 1931. We took over the farming business after my father's [Charley Anstine's] death. Archie was a town boy and I a country girl. After seven years of farming, he knew it was not the life for him.

By then we had a son, Tex (1934) and a daughter, Billie (1936). Starting a new life was big decision, especially for me, to leave the only home I had ever known. It was a wise decision. We chose Centralia (1937) [in Lewis County, Washington] because Archie had a brother, Ray, in Chehalis [also in Lewis County]. We bought a grocery store on Waunch's Prairie [in Centralia]. We are now retired and still living on Waunch's Prairie.

Our children attended Centralia High School, Centralia College, and the University of Washington [in Seattle]. Both are teachers. Tex and family live in Seattle and he teaches in Kent. Billie and family live in Renton and she teaches in Snoqualmie. Tex and Eileen (Greer) have a daughter, Darci, and a son, Blake.

Billie and Don Dorland have a daughter, Paige, and a son, Ty. We are proud of our children, their spouses, and our grandchildren. Eileen is a Medical Technician and Don is an administrator in Kent High School.

All the men in our family are avid hunters. Our children have cabins at Crystal Mt., not far from the ski area, where they and their families love to ski. It is also a hunter's paradise. The guys have elk and deer antlers to prove it.

We have never regretted coming to the West Coast. We have made some lasting friendships with some very dear people.

By Lennie (Anstine) Severns

[ Written no later than 1985 ]

Top  

Darci Severns's tales

Lydia and Charley Anstine's great grandaughter, Darci Severns, recalled a number of tales she heard from her grandmother Lennie (Anstine) Severns, her great aunt Aura (Anstine) Dey, and her mother Eileen (Greer) Severns. Darci is the daughter of Lennie's and Archie's son Tex Severns, who was my 2nd cousin, and so she and I (William O. Wetherall) are 2nd cousins once removed. Darci shared the following account of her memories with me (email, 23 October 2013).

Darci Severns's story

I vaguely remember meeting Claude [Williams, Sadie's son] when I was little, around 40 years ago. He had an apartment in downtown Seattle and my parents took me there.

My mom [Eileen Severns] vaguely remembers meeting Faye [(Anstine) (Mathews) Rebenstorf, Sadie's daughter] and an older woman, she thinks she was one of the "Baldwin girls" [probably Meda (Baldwin) Ure], yet she's not sure. It was in the Spokane area during the 60's. My great aunt Aura (Anstine) Dey lived there with her husband George who was also from the Seward area.

Grandma Lennie liked telling me good stories from Nebraska. I remember her talking about an aunt Sadie [(Baldwin) Williams]. She would tell me how education and music were very important to "Mother", as she referred to Lydia. I knew it was expensive for the family to send her to high school in Seward, yet "Mother put her foot down and Daddy made it happen." I think she drove back and forth to Seward each week with Claude and Faye to go to school. I'm not sure where she lived in Seward during the week, yet I believe they drove a car and Claude taught her how to drive.

I remember her [Grandma Lennie] telling me the barn had running cold water, but not the house. They had a pump on the back porch. If you didn't take care of the animals then you didn't have anything. I know when they left in 1938 they still didn't have indoor plumbing or electricity.

Aura [the Anstine's 3rd daughter] never had children and had a special relationship with my dad and therefore me. She would tell me the "real" stories. How it was hard to get ahead financially being tenant farmers. The animals and farm hands had to be fed before the family. She told me Lennie only weighed 98 pounds when she got pregnant with my dad and wore Aura's dresses during her pregnancy. Aura was always more plump than Lennie.

Aura was a loud, bawdy woman that I loved being around. She told it to you straight. I'm still sad that I was only 16 when she passed. George Dey, blind in 1987, rode a Greyhound bus alone from Spokane to Seattle to deliver to me her wedding ring on my high school graduation. He said she'd made the request right before she died 2 1/2 years prior. I wear the ring every day.

Top  

Uncle Charley stories

Charles Andrew Anstine (1883-1932) was the son of a farmer, and he himself became a farmer, in Utica, Seward County, Nebraska. He married Lydia Baldwin, who he had met in Lincoln Nebraska, in 1906, and they were the parents of three daughters when he registered for 2nd draft on 12 September 1918 near the end of the World War or Great War, now know as World War I.

Charles Anstine's enlistment card describes him as a resident of Utica, Seward, Nebraska, 34 and white, a native born citizen and self-employed farmer. He gave Mrs. Lydia Anstine, at the same address, as the name of his nearest relative. The Seward County Local Board official agreed that Charles was short and stout, had brown eyes and light brown hair, and had no obvious disabilities that would have disqualified him from service.

Darci Severns remembers that her grandmother Lennie (Anstine) Severns, and her great aunt Aura (Anstine) Dey, said that Charley "had very small feet and fit into Lydia's shoes. And he could wear her gloves." (Email, 8 November 2013)

Charles Anstine was "Uncle Charley" to William B. Wetherall, who -- especially in his later years -- told his children, including this writer, and a few of his friends, what we children dubbed "Uncle Charley stories".

My dad rarely talked about himself when we, his children, were growing up. He told his Uncle Charley stories late in his life, almost always at the dinner table. He was a disciplinarian when it came to eating. We had to clean our plates. No food was ever thrown out. Failure to eat something on our dinner plates meant eating it the next morning.

Our mother, raised on a farm, shared our father's distaste for waste. She had all manner of ways to remake leftovers into tasty meals. Both of our parents impressed on us the austerity they had experienced when they were growing up.

My dad told his Uncle Charley stories partly out of nostalgia, and partly to impress on us how hard -- but good -- life was in his youth. We knew how he felt about farming, for he always had a huge vegetable garden after moving from San Francisco to Grass Valley in 1955.

While living in San Francisco, we went camping practically every summer and "roughed" it with a tent, sleeping bags, and a Coleman stove and lanterns. After moving to Grass Valley, we never again went camping. In fact, my parents took only two family trips during the years we were growing up in Grass Valley -- in 1958 to Iowa, and in 1959 to Idaho -- both related to family reunions.

William B. Wetherall's 2011 testimony

On 8 March 2011, William B. Wetherall was interviewed at his home by Gregg Schiffner, a local cinematographer and good friend, who was preparing for a presentation of Bill's life at his 100th birthday party. In the course of the interview, Bill talked a bit about his experiences working on his uncle's farm in Nebraska during the summers when he was going to high school.

Gregg wondered if Charley was on his father's side, and my father said yes, and then corrected himself. He was on his mother's side, he said, but he never did clarify that Charley was the husband of his mother's sister Lydia.

He emphatically stated that he had worked on the Nebraska farm 6 summers. The first summer, he said, was after completing the 8th grade of grade school in Knoxville, which agrees with his 2010 oral account to this writer, his son. And he stressed that he had also worked the summer after he graduated from high school, which he hadn't mentioned in 2010.

In 2010, he related that he graduated from the 8th grade in Knoxville in 1924, and from high school in Des Moines in 1928, in what was a conventional 8-4 system. In Knoxville he lived with his paternal grandfather's family, and in Des Moines he lived with his father's new family. This, too, suggests that he worked only 5 summers -- unless he also worked the summer of 1923 (which is possible), or perhaps the summer of 1929 (which is possible but less likely).

In 2011, he did not go into detail about his life on the farm in Nebraska. It started talking about Nebraska in the course of explaining what he did after graduating from high school, and he ended up telling four stories, about (1) his plans to go to college in Iowa the next fall, (2) his work on Charley's farm that summer, (3) Charley's offer of an interest in the farm if he stayed and went to college in Nebraska, and (4) his decision to Idaho instead. And parts of all these stories are confusing.

Though he seemed confused as to when he first worked on Charley's farm, he clearly stated that the first time, someone -- presumably Charley -- came to Knoxville to pick him up, and camped at the fair grounds. "That's what they did in those days," he said. He didn't say how Charley came. Possibly he drove. The distance would have been about 250 miles or 400 kilometers. While not an especially long distance by today's standards, in the early 1920s it would have been a long and arduous day on the road, with a pit stop or two to gas up and check the water and oil, and pray that there be no flat tires, broken fan belt, or blown gasket.

My father said in the 2011 interview that the farm was 360 acres -- "half a section" he added, a section being 640 acres. He said that Charley offered him "a quarter" of the farm or "produce" -- apparently meaning a quarter of the income from the farm, since Charley didn't own the land -- if he would join him on the farm. However, he told his uncle he planned to go to college.

It's not clear from the interview how big Charley's farm was, and I have no idea how large a typical farm in Seward might have been. By the 1920s, it was probably a partly mechanized operation, as by then mechanization was sweeping the country. But many farmers, including Charley, farmed on land belonging to someone else.

My mother was raised on an Idaho farm her grandparents had homesteaded from the late 1890s and her parents then operated until the mid 1920s, about the time my dad began working on Charley's farm in Nebraska. My grandparents sold their farm in the face of rapid mechanization, which radically changed the economics of farming, as the more successful farmers bought up smaller homesteads and merged them into larger mechanized operations.

Tenant farming

The 1900 to 1940 censuses for the Anstine family tell the following story.

1900 census shows Richard and Helen Anstine (Charley is 16) renting farm land.

1910 census shows Charley and Lydia Anstine (Velma is 1-5/12, Lennie is 0) renting farm land.

1920 census shows Charley working as a farmer on his "Own account" as opposed to working for wages.

1930 census shows Charley working as a farmer on his "Own" rather than as an employee. The Anstines have a radio set, but the box stating whether they own or rent their farm home is blank. Half of their farming neighbors owned, and half were renting, their homes.

Charley thus appears to have been a tenant farmer -- which means that he stood to prosper only if production was good and the market was strong. I would guess that he made the offer to my dad in 1928 because he felt his farm would produce enough to make it worth both his and my dad's while.

Having 3 surviving daughters, 2 of them marriageable, the 3rd not yet 2 years old, with Lydia suffering from cancer, Charley was definitely in need of reliable help. I imagine he saw my father -- his nephew-in-law -- as a sort of son, born the year between his 2nd and 3rd daughters, Lennie and Aura. And he must have been impressed by Bill's work during previous summers.

Charley would have understood my father's desire to go to college. Lennie, his daughter, was then going to the University of Nebraska in Lincoln to become a teacher. His suggestion that my father go to college in Lincoln, instead of Penn College in Oskaloosa, Iowa, would have put my father close enough to Seward (30 miles), and the farm in Utica (40 miles), that he could have worked there at least part time.

The depression, triggered by the market crash a couple of months after Lydia's death in 1929, probably contributed to the difficulties Charley had as his own health declined. Lennie married Archie Severns in 1931, and they attempted to make a go of the farm before and after Charley's death from cancer in 1932. But as Lennie relates in her 1985 account (see "Lennie's saga"), they decided to restart their lives in Washington.

Farming life in the 1920s and 1930s

Darci Severns has shared similar stories she recalls hearing from Lennie, her paternal grandmother, and Aura, her paternal great aunt, of life on the Anstine farm in Utica during the 1920s and 1930s.

William B. Wetherall, when telling his Uncle Charley stories, sometimes said the family was poor but they had lots of food and ate well -- and all the food you could eat. He said they had some cows, hogs, and chickens, and his chores included feeding and caring for them every day, begining every morning before breakfast. Other work involved the crops. I can't remember what he said they were. I would guess they grew a little bit of everything, larger crops for sale, smaller crops for family consumption or bartering with neighbors, which included other Anstines.

My dad's work on Charley's farm spanned the mid and late 1920s, before Lydia's death and the Wall Street crash two months later. By the time Charley died, the Great Depression was in full swing, making tenant farming even more difficult.

William B. Wetherall laced his Uncle Charley stories with the idioms of times. "A dollar a day plus found" was a standard refrain, and he often repeated "Found. Food." -- stressing both words -- and sometimes added "All you could eat." Life on the farm was mainly about food, as perhaps life is everywhere.

In the 2011 interview, he said Charley had always given him a little money when he went home at the end of summer. And the last two summer, he had paid him 30 dollars a month, the standard wage for farm labor at the time.

Top  

Baldwin-Steele family galleries

Baldwin-Steele Galleries

Sadie Baldwin -- Williams, Mathews, Disrud

Sadie Baldwin had 2 children, a daughter Faye, whose father appears to have been Ambrose Powell Williams, and a son Claude, whose father seems to have been Charles F. Williams. Whether these are the same men who went by different names is not clear to me at the time of this writing (March 2021).

Faye married 3 times -- to men named Mathews, Nelson, and Rebenstorf. Her only child, Marilyn, was fathered by Mathews in 1934. Marilyn was nearly 10 when Faye married Rebenstorf in 1944. He passed away in 1966. Claude, who appears to have never married, passed away in 1977, and Faye passed away in 1995. Marilyin passed away in 2013, and her husband, Norman Disrud, passed away in 2016. Their only child, Todd, and his children, now carry the torch of Sadie's Baldwin-Howard line.

Rebenstorfs

The Rebenstorfs and Wetheralls, circa 1952
Wetherall home, 1958 33rd Avenue, San Francisco
Howard and Faye Rebenstorf, Jerry Wetherall, Marilyn Mathews (holding dog),
Mary Ellen Wetherall, Sadie Williams (standing), and Billy Wetherall (this writer, sitting)
Wetherall Family Collection

Rebenstorfs

Marilyn Mathews marries Norman Disrud at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, on 24 August 1957
Marriage license shows groom and bride as Coeur d'Alene residents
Witness Lois Lemmer was Marilyn's 2nd cousin in Meda (Baldwin) Ure's line
Marilyn was the matron of honor at Lois's wedding 2 months later (see below)

Copped from Ancestry.com

Marilyn

Marilyn Mathews high school portrait, 1953

Photos, card, and clipping from Wetherall Family Collection

Disruds Christmas Todd and Rhonda
Marilyn Marilyn

Todd Disrud's 1st Christmas, 1959
Left 4 generations -- Faye, Marilyn, Todd, Sadie
Right Disrud Family -- Norman, Todd, Marilyn

Christmas card from Disrud family, 1981

Todd Disrud marries Rhonda Jermane, 1985

Ellen postcard

Martha Ellen (Steele) Baldwin at St. Maries, Idaho home, mid 1910s
Unidentified postcard photo -- identities (by this writer) tentative
Compare porch design with designs in following photos
Wetherall Family Collection

Ellen postcard Ellen postcard
Ellen house field

Bare headed Ellen Baldwin by a home near a field, with child, early 1910s
Possibly with granddaughter Greta Ure in St. Maries, Idaho
Unidentified postcard photo -- identities (by this writer) tentative
Compare corner of home with photo immediately below
Wetherall Family Collection

Ellen house field Ellen house field
Meda

Meda (Baldwin) Ure by a home near a field, with child in yard, early 1910s
Possibly Baldwin-Steele home, perhaps Ure home, in St. Maries, Idaho
Girl with parasol possibly Meda's daughter Greta, born 15 July 1912
Undentified original 4x2-1/2 print -- identities (by this writer) tentative
Compare with photo immediately above
Wetherall Family Collection

Sadie

Hatless Sadie Williams with parasol by Baldwin home, with child on porch, early 1910s
Girl on porch possibly Sadie's niece Greta Ure, born 15 July 1912
Sadie and her children are enumerated in 1910 St. Maries census
Unidentified original 4-2-1/2 inch photo -- identities (by this writer) tentative
Compare with similar photo of Sadie wearing hat (below)
Wetherall Family Collection

Sadie parasol

Sadie Williams with parasol and hat by Baldwin home, early 1910s
Compare with similar photo of Sadie without hat (above)
Unidentified original 4x2-1/2 print -- identities (by this writer) tentative
Wetherall Family Collection

Sadie parasol Sadie parasol
Birthday party Birthday party

Baldwin-Steele home in St. Maries, Idaho, mid 1910s

AboveBirthday party for "Master William [Bascum] Wetherall"
at Baldwin-Steele home in St. Maries on 25 March 1915

WBW (age 4) front and center -- standing (left), sitting (right)
Girl to WBW's right (left) and left (right) may be his 1st cousin Greta Ure

RightAnother party the following year, 1916, at same place
William B. Wetherall, front row, 3rd from left, holding card
Man on porch might by his grandfather N. Bascum Baldwin
WBW's father WRW took him to Knoxville, Iowa, in 1917

Note porch design features
1. Edge of roof with exposed rafters under eaves
2. Large square posts (columns) tapered at top
3. Railing and siding of enclosing knee walls

BelowBirthday dinner invitation card and matching envelope
Envelope contains 2 copies of above left photograph
and 2 lockets of blondish, flaxen, brownish hair
Card probably printed by WBW's father William R. Wetherall
a printer then also living and working in St. Maries

Wetherall Family Collection

Birthday party
Birthday party Birthday party
Sadie house field

Sadie Williams by a home in a field, circa 1910s
Possibly at home of Lydia and Charley Anstine in Utica, Nebraska
Note brick foundation
Unidentified original photo -- identities (by this writer) tentative
Wetherall Family Collection

Sadie house field Sadie house field

Top  


Lydia Baldwin -- Anstine, Severns

Lydia, the 2nd of the 4 Baldwin sisters, met Charley Anstine in 1907 in Lincoln, Nebraska, and they married there on 12 February 1908 and settled in Utica in Seward County, Nebraska, near Charley's parents. Velma, the 1st of their 4 daughters, was born in Seward County on 30 November 1908.

Lydia's parents, with Meda (3rd Baldwin sister) and Ida (youngest sister), moved to Spokane in Washington, and to St. Maries in Idaho. Sadie (1st sister) also lived in the northwest for a while before returning to Seward, where her children -- Faye, born in Knoxville, Iowa in 1906 and Claude, born in Lincoln, Nebraska in 1907 -- grew up close to their Anstine cousins.

Velma, the oldest Anstine sister, died in 1919, leaving Lennie and Aura, the 2nd and 3rd sister. The 4th sister, Imogene, was born 14 years after Aura.

Lennie, the oldest surviving sister, helped her grandmother Ellen Baldwin raise Imogine after Lydia died in 1929. Lennie married Archie Severns in 1931, and they adopted Imogene when Charlie died in 1932.

The keeper of the "Anstine-Baldwin" keys today is Darci Severns, Lennie's granddaughter. See Lennie's saga and Darci's tales (above) for other photos and stories.

Anstine girls Anstine girls
Anstine girls

Anstine sisters Lennie (b1910), Velma (b1908), and Aura (b1912) near home in Utica, Nebraska, circa 1918
Velma died the following year from "ether pneumonia" following surgery for "acute appendicitis"
(Wetherall Family photo)

Anstine girls Anstine and Williams cousins at fountain, mid 1920s
L→R Lennie Anstine, Claude Williams, Faye Williams, Aura Anstine
Children of oldest Baldwin sisters Lydia (Lennie, Aura) and Sadie (Claude, Faye)
Grandchildren of N. Bascum and M. Ellen (Steele) Baldwin
Photo printed by Lawrence Studio, Seward, Nebraska
(Wetherall Family photo
Anstine girls Anstine Girls Ensemble, mid 1920s
Lydia Anstine (piano) with daughters Lennie (violin) and Aura (saxophone)
Playing at home in Utica, Nebraska, to audience of portraits on top of piano
(Wetherall Family photo)
Lennie Anstine Lennie Anstine
High school or college graduation,
circa 1926-1928
(Severns Family photo)
Lennie Anstine Lennie Anstine, nlt 1927
High school or college graduation
Gumbel (studio), Seward, Nebraska
(Wetherall Family photo)
Aura Anstine Aura Anstine, circa 1928-1930
High school or college graduation
Gumbel (studio), Seward, Nebraska
(Wetherall Family photo)
Imogene Anstine Imogene Anstine, circa 1943
"Imie" to Lennie and Aura
High school graduation
(Severns Family photo)
Imogene Anstine Imogene Anstine high school portrait, 1943
Senior, Centralia High School, Washington
The Skookum WA WA yearbook, page 32
Copped and cropped from Ancestor.com
Anstine sisters Imogene, Lennie, and Aura Anstine, 1970-1980
(Wetherall Family photo)
Anstines

Anstine-Williams summer picnic at river -- Mid-1920s
Probably Big Blue River near Seward, Nebraska
L-R identifications possibly in Ellen's hand
Charley (Anstine), Lydia (Anstine), Claude (Williams), Lennie (Anstine),
Sadie (Williams), Aura (Anstine), unidentified man
Faye is not in the photo perhaps because she took it
Wetherall Family Collection

Anstines
Lydia and Lennie

Lydia Anstine and daughter Lennie
Porch of Anstine home circa 1928
Wetherall Family Collection

Ellen

Ellen (Steele) Baldwin
Probably late 1920s or early 1930s
Possibly at Utica, Nebraska
Wetherall Family Collection

Ellen and Imogene

Ellen holding Imogene Anstine, born 5 September 1926
At Anstine home, dated 1927
Wetherall Family Collection

Top  


Ure and Lemmer families (Meda Baldwin)

Meda Baldwin, the 3rd of the 4 Baldwin sisters, remained geographically and socially the closest to their mother Ellen Baldwin. She married Clifford Ure in 1911 and they had 2 children -- Greta, born in 1912 -- and Dale, born 16 years later in 1928. Because my father, born in 1911, was raised in St. Maries during his first few years of life, and lived with the Ure's while going to college and law school in the early 1930s, he was as close if not closer to his Ure cousins -- especially Greta, but also Dale -- as he was to his cousin's Faye and Claude Williams in Sadie's line, and Lennie and Aura Anstine in Lydia's line.

I had more opportunity to meet Sadie and Faye because they -- like Ellen, who died before I was born -- were the travelers in the family.

The keepers of the keys of Meda's Ure-Baldwin line are Greta's daughter Lois (Lemmer) (Santa Rosa) Slater, and her daughter Patricia Santa Rosa Flint.

Greta

Greta Ure, 1930, high school graduation
Wetherall Family Collection

Greta

Greta (Ure) Lemmer, 22 August 1987
Scan from Patricia Santa Rosa Flint

Greta

Greta (Ure) Lemmer
Scan from Patricia Santa Rosa Flint

Greta

AboveGreta Ure with Model T, circa 1930
Wetherall Family Collection

RightLois Lemmer to marry Arthur Santa Rosa
Spokane Daily Chronicle, Wednesday, 16 October 1957, page 12
Clipped from Newspapers.com

Lois Lemmer
Orene Babe Milton

A late 1910s Model T on Central Ridge, circa 1920
Orene Hardman (left) and Babe Hardman (right) with
1st-cousin-once-removered Milton Nathan Hunter
Wetherall Family Collection

Model Ts and Gay Twenties

The photograph of Greta Ure dressed to kill in winter, standing in front of a rag-top Model T on a country road, probably near St. Maries where the Ures lived, was taken around 1930, possible by Harlan Lemmer -- his family moved to St. Maries in the 1920s and they married in 1931. This is my favorite of the several photographs in the Wetherall Family Collection showing Model Ts -- second only to the one of my mother Bug (Orene) Hardman and her older sister Babe (Ullie), shot around 1920 on Central Ridge in Idaho, before either was in her teens. By the late 1920s and early 1930s, both Bug and Babe were dressing to kill the local male fauna in Peck, Idaho, in the fashions of the Gay Twenties. See 7. Hunter-Thomas and related families and 3. Hardman-Hunter and related families for details.

Top  


Wetheralls (Ida Baldwin)

For Ida (Baldwin) Wetherall's family, see Wetherall-Hardman family page.

Top  

1959 Baldwin-Steele family reunion

The following photographs show two family reunion dinners with different mixes of the descendants of 3 of the 4 Baldwin sisters -- Sadie, Meda, and Ida. Sadie's and Meda's families were in Idaho and Washington, and Ida's family (this writer's Wetherall family) was in California. Lydia's line was not represented, though the families of a couple of her daughters were in Washington.

The Wetherall family traveled to Idaho during the summer of 1959 for the purpose of reunions on both my father's Baldwin-Steele side and my mother's Hardman-Hunter side. I didn't make the trip because I had just graduated from high school and started a full-time summer job in San Francisco.

Of the two gatherings shown here, the one with the most attendants was held at the home of Greta and Harlan Lemmer in Meda's line in Spokane, Washington. The smaller gathering met at the home of Faye and Howard Rubenstorf in Sadie's line in Coeur d'Alene in Idaho.

The images are scans of 3-1/2in square glossy color prints with 1/4in borders in the Wetherall Family Collection. There are similar prints in the collections of some of the other families.

See keys to identifications below the panel of photographs

1959 Idaho reunion

Photo 1

Sitting
1. Mary Ellen Wetherall (later Zweig), my sister
2. Almeda Jane (Baldwin) Ure
3. Sadie (Baldwin) Williams
4. Lois (Lemmer) Santa Rosa (later Slater)
5. (elbow) Marilyn (Mathews) Disrud

Standing
1. Orene (Hardman) Wetherall, my mother
2. Gene Lemmer, Meda's grandson
3. Howard Rebenstorff, Faye's husband
4. Harlan Lemmer, Greta's husband
5. Claude Williams, Sadie's son

1959 Idaho reunion

Photo 2

Sitting
1. Sadie (Baldwin) Williams
2. Lois (Lemmer) Santa Rosa (later Slater)
3. Marilyn (Mathews) Disrud, Faye's daughter
4. ? Unidentified woman

Standing
1. (shoulder) Gene Lemmer, Greta's son
2. William B. Wetherall, my father
3. Howard Rebenstorf, Faye's husband
4. Harlan Lemmer, Greta's husband
5. Claude Williams, Sadie's son
6. Jerry Wetherall, my brother
7. Norman Disrud, Marilyn's husband

1959 Idaho reunion

Photo 3

Sitting
1. Sadie (Baldwin) Williams
2. Lois (Lemmer) Santa Rosa (later Slater)
3. Marilyn (Mathews) Disrud, Faye's daughter
4. ? Unidentified woman

Standing
1. William B. Wetherall, my father
2. Howard Rebenstorf, Faye's husband
3. Harlan Lemmer, Greta's husband
4. Claude Williams, Sadie's son
5. Jerry Wetherall, my brother
6. Norman Disrud, Marilyn's husband

1959 Idaho reunion

Photo 4

Sitting
1. Lois (Lemmer) Santa Rosa (later Slater)
2. Marilyn (Mathews) Disrud, Faye's daughter
3. ? Unidentified woman

Standing
1. Faye Rebenstorf, WBW's 1st cousin
2. Greta (Ure) Lemmer, WBW's 1st cousin
   holding granddaughter Brenda Santa Rosa
3. Brenda Santa Rosa (in arms), Lois's daughter

1959 Idaho reunion

Photo 5

Standing
1. Mary Ellen Wetherall, my sister
2. Gene Lemmer (brown coat), Greta's son
3. Faye Rebenstorf, Marilyn's mother
   holding Brenda Santa Rosa
4. Brenda Santa Rosa (in arms), Lois's daughter
5. Claude Williams (jacket), Sadie's son

Sitting
1. Orene (Hardman) Wetherall, my mother
2. Meda (Baldwin) Ure, Gene's grandmother
3. Sadie (Baldwin) Williams, Faye's mother
4. Greta (Ure) Lemmer, Meda's daughter
5. Lois (Lemmer) Santa Rosa (red dress)
   Greta's daughter, my 2nd cousin

1959 Idaho reunion

Photo 6

Sitting
1. Greta Lemmer, Meda's daughter, WBW's 1st cousin
2. Lois (Lemmer) Santa Rosa (red dress)
   Greta's daughter, Meda's granddaughter
3. Marilyn (Mathews) Disrud, Faye's daughter
4. ? Unidentified woman

Standing
1. Brenda Santa Rosa, Lois's daughter
   in arms of Faye Rebenstorf
2. Claude Williams, Faye's brother
3. Jerry Wetherall, WBW's son, my brother
4. Harlan Lemmer, Greta's husband
5. Howard Rebenstorf, Faye's husband
6. William B. Wetherall, my father

1959 Idaho reunion

Photo 7

Cherry (rhubarb?) pie dessert

IDs similar to those in Photo 8 -- except they begin with back of Howard Rebenstorf's head, Norman's father cannot be seen, and William B. Wetherall, my father, is sitting where Norman is sitting in, which suggests that Norman snapped this shot.

Norman's parents were visiting from minnesota. Marilyn had given birth to Todd Lee Disrud on 5 June 1959, shortly before the reunion. Apparently he is sleeping in another room.

Both shots catch Jerry Wetherall studying someone. Claude is smoking.

1959 Idaho reunion

Photo 8

Kicking back after dessert

Left to right around table
 0. William B. Wetherall, taking picture
 1. Selmer Disrud, Norman's dad
 2. Norman Disrud, Marilyn's husband
 3. Claude Williams, Sadie's son
 4. Jerry Wetherall, my brother
 5. Sadie (Baldwin) Williams, WBW's aunt
 6. Orene (Hardman) Wetherall, my mother
 7. Mary Ellen Wetherall (later Zweig), my sister
 8. Marilyn (Mathews) Disrud, Faye's daughter
 9. Olga Disrud, Norman's mother
10. Faye Rubenstorf, Sadie's daughter
11. Howard Rubenstorf, Faye's husband

Top  

10. Baldwin-Howard

John R. Baldwin and Rebecca and Margaret Howard

Table 10   John R. Baldwin's families with the Howard sisters
Table Name Birth Death Age Born Died Buried Vocation
0 John R. Baldwin 22 Sep 1828 10 Mar 1909 80 VA Jackson Co KY Wilson Cem Moores Creek KY Farmer, minister
0 Rebecca Ann Howard 31 Oct 1828 3 Apr 1855 26 Harlan Co VA Lee Co VA Lee Co VA House keeper
1 Elizabeth Letitia (Taylor) 26 Aug 1849 6 May 1930 80 VA KY AR Dyche Mem Prk London Laurel KY House keeper
2 John Milton Baldwin 9 Oct 1851 29 May 1936 84 Jonesville Lee VA Meeteetse Park WY Meeteetse Cemetery Farmer
3 Mary Ellen (Lewis) 30 Jan 1853 14 Feb 1909 56 VA KY Lewis Cem Jackson KY House keeper
0 Margaret Anne Howard 1 Sep 1835 3 Jun 1912 76 Lee Co VA Moores Creek KY Wilson Cem Moores Creek KY House keeper
1  4 William Henley Baldwin 19 Mar 1856 15 Feb 1937 80 VA Stites ID Stites IOOF Cemetery Farmer
2  5 Robert Ewing Baldwin 21 Aug 1858 1942 abt 84 VA KY King Cem KY Farmer
3  6 Sarah c1859 Oct 1859 6/12 VA West Dist Lee VA 1860 census mortality data, Lee County, Virginia
Confirmed by scan of enumeration sheet
Sarah c1859 20 Oct 1859 4m 7d VA Lee VA Father "Baldwin", Mother "Margaret"
Unconfirmed transcription from FHL Film 32441
Sarah J. c1859 30 Oct 1859 4m 7d VA Poor Valley Lee VA F "S.R. Baldwin", M "Margaret Baldwin"
Unconfirmed transcription from FHL Film 2048576
Mary J. 23 May 1859 Lee VA F "John R. Baldwin", M "Margaret Baldwin"
Unconfirmed transcription of Christening record
4  7 Baldwin, Male 23 Dec 1861 Poor Valley Lee VA F "John R. Baldwin", M "Margaret Baldwin"
Unconfirmed transcription of Christening record
5  8 Newton Bascum Baldwin 24 Dec 1862 22 Mar 1919 56 VA St. Maries ID Woodlawn Cem ID Restaurateur

1863-1864   The Baldwin-Howard family moves from Lee County, Virginia, to Jackson County, Kentucky, during the Civil War (1861-1865)

6  9 James Alfred Baldwin 23 Apr 1864 21 Aug 1954 90 KY Annville Jackson KY McGee Cem KY Farmer
7 10 Elihu Joseph Baldwin 6 Oct 1866 2 July 1942 75 Jackson Co KY Jackson Co KY Davidson Cem Peoples Jackson KY Farmer
8 11 Henry Clay Baldwin 5 Nov 1867 7 Mar 1950 82 Laurel Co KY Annville Jackson KY Medlock Cem KY Farmer Politician
9 12 Martha Ann (Moore) 3 Jul 1870 14 Mar 1934 63 KY KY Landrum Cem London KY House keeper
10 13 George Finley Baldwin 12 Mar 1873 20 May 1946 73 KY Peoples KY King Cem KY Teacher Farmer
11 14 Samuel L.B. Baldwin 17 Apr 1875 17 May 1941 76 KY Portland OR Laborer
12 15 Archelus Fernando Baldwin 20 Jun 1876 21 Feb 1935 58 KY KY Wilson Cem Moores Creek KY Teacher Farmer
13 16 Charles Nelson Baldwin 2 Sep 1879 31 Jul 1944 64 KY Symbol Laurel Co KY Pilgrims Rest Cem KY Farmer
Baldwin-Howard marriage 1855 Click on image to enlarge
John R. Baldwin and Margaret Howard marry on 13 June 1855
Makeshift mixed-bag Kentucky County marriage register
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Margaret Baldwin 1912 Margaret Baldwin's death certificate
Informant A.F. Baldwin does not know his mother's maiden name
and only supposes she was born in Virginia.

Copped and cropped from FamilySearch
  1. John Baldwin was one of 4 sons of about 7 children of John Milton Baldwin (1792-1855) and Elizabeth Seale (b1806). He may have been a Methodist minister, but if so it was a part-time vocation, for all censuses show him as a farmer.
  2. John and Rebecca appear to have married in late 1848. Both would have been 19 or 20.
    They had 3 children before her death on 3 April 1855 (according to Margaret's 1909 pension declaration).

    Both Rebecca and her younger sister Margaret, who John would marry after Rebecca's death, are often said to have been born in Harlan County, Kentucky, to John Flannery Howard (b 5 Nov 1802, d 25 Dec 1870, Lee County, Virginia) and Elizabeth Denny Mark (1812–1853, Lee County, Virginia). The 1850 census for District 31, Lee County, Virginia enumerates "Rebecca" (22) as born in Kentucky, but shows "Margaret" (14) as born in Virginia, to Virginia-born "John F. Howard" (48) and Virginia-born "Elizabeth" (38). Among the 8 Howard children enumerated on the 1850 census, only the oldest of the 8, "Martha J." 19, was born in Kentucky. All other children, including Margaret, were born in Virginia. The Howards married no later than 1828, the year Rebecca was born. Rebecca is not in the 1850 census with her parents and siblings because she married John R. Baldwin in 1848 when about 20 and is enumerated with him and a daughter, Elizabeth, in the 1850 census.
    1. See Chronology of Baldwin-Howard family (below) for records related to
      10. John R. Baldwin, Rebecca and Margaret Howard, and their children.
  3. Elizabeth is the only child shown in the 1850 census when she is 1 year old. She married Jesse Milburn Taylor and they had 8 children of whom 6 survived as adults.
    1. See 10.1 Elizabeth Letitia Baldwin and Jesse Milburn Taylor in the "Baldwin Galleries" section (below).
  4. John Milton's namesake seems to have been his paternal grandfather. He reportedly married Verena Marie McCoy (1864–1934) on 5 July 1880 in Wells, Elko County, Nevada. He may have first married Minerva Jane Burchfield (1859–1941) on 25 November 1879 in Claiborne, Tennessee. It appears that John and Marie had 15 children of whom 10 survived into adulthood. They seem to have been "Pappy" and "Mammy" in the family.
    John appears with his sisters Elizabeth and Mary, all of whom are John R. Baldwin's children with Rebecca Howard, in the 1860 census, after Rebecca had died and their father had married her sister Margaret.
    1. See 10.2 John Milton Baldwin and Verena Marie McCoy in the "Baldwin Galleries" section (below).
  5. Mary Ellen Baldwin appears with her older siblings Elizabeth Letitia and John Milton in the 1860 census after their father had remarried their mother's sister Margaret. One Baldwin family tree gives Mary Ellen's familiar name as "Mollie". Another lists "Mollie" as a child born in 1852 between John and Mary. If there was such a child, then she either died or was adopted out before 1860. The "Mollie = Mary Ellen" contention seems more likely.
    The 1860 census for John R. and Margaret Baldwin lists Mary Ellen Baldwin as "Mary E.D." age 7. I have not seen "E.D." on any other records.
    Mary Ellen Baldwin married Zera Thomas Lewis on 8 March 1880 in Jackson county. The ledger clearly shows that "Zera Thomas" and "Mary Ellen Baldwin" were married on "March 8th 1880" but the place of marriage box is blank. All censuses are consistent with an 8 March 1880 marriage. However, the 1 June 1880 census shows Mary Ellen with 3 children born before the marriage. Some family histories have treated these children as her biological children. Other records, however, show that they were Zera's from an earlier marriage.
    1. See 10.3 Mary Ellen Baldwin and Zela (Thomas L.) Lewis in the "Baldwin Galleries" section (below)
      for a record-based analysis of the origin and composition of the Lewis-Baldwin family.
  6. Margaret, John's second wife, Rebecca's younger sister by about 10 years, was born in Kentucky.

    John and Margaret married on 13 June 1855 in Harlan, Kentucky, according to a makeshift "MARRIAGE REGISTER" (see image). The "BY WHOME MARRIED" column states athat they were married by "Solomon Pope, M.M.E.S." The "PLACE OF MARRIAGE" and "NAMES OF WITNESS PRESENT" columns are blank for most couples listed under "PARTIES NAMES". "Solomon Pope, M.M.E.S." apparently refers to Elizabeth Susan (Ball) Pope (1815-1906), the wife of Solomon Pope (1812-1883), both of whom were born and died in Harlan County, Kentucky, and are buried in Pope Cemetery in the county -- she as "SUSAN BALL POPE / A CHILD OF GOD" (Find a Grave). A similarly constructed makeshift marriage register shows that "Solomon Pope - E.S. Ball" married in "1836" -- no month or day or other particulars.
    1. Harlan County, Kentucky, is immediately north of Lee County, Virginia, where John R. Baldwin was born.
      Both Baldwin-Howard families originated, and all children through N.B. Baldwin were born, in Lee County.

    Margaret raised Rebecca's 3 children, and she and John had at least 12 (as many as 14) of their own (see particulars below). Their 1st child, William, was born on 19 March 1856, and their 12th and last child, Charles, was born on 2 September 1878, which works out to about 1 child every 22 months.
    Margaret's death certificate gives her date of birth as 1 December 1835 and states that she died of chronic valvular heart disease. The informant was A.F. Baldwin, presumably her second youngest son Archelus Fernando Baldwin, who was then 35 years old. Margaret's father's name was given as John Howard, birthplace Virginia. Her mother's maiden name was "Do not know" and her mother's birthplace was "Supposed to be Va." The undertaker was James Baldwin -- possibly Margaret's son James Alfred.
    1. See Chronology of Baldwin-Howard family (below) for records related to
      10. John R. Baldwin, Rebecca and Margaret Howard, and their children.
  7. William "Will" Henley Baldwin married Nancy Jane Robbins (1860–1945) and they had as many as 13 children. Both died in Stites in Idaho County, Idaho.
    1. See 10.4 William Henley Baldwin and Nancy Jane Robbins in the "Baldwin Galleries" section (below).
  8. Robert Ewing Baldwin (1858-1942) married Lydia Ketron (1858-1895) but she died leaving no children. He then married Eliza Jane King (1873-1938) in 1896, and they appear to have had 5 children. She died of stomach cancer on 30 May 1938. Lydia is buried in Wilson Cemetery in Moores Creek near Annville in Jackson County, Kentucky. Robert and Eliza are buried in King Cemetery in Peoples, which is also near Annville. Robert's younger brother George married Eliza's younger sister Emeline, and they and their youngest son, Charles, are also buried in King Cemetery.
    Someone on a Baldwin-family message board has claimed that "Emmaline King's mother was a full blooded Cherokee" (see King family and Cherokee blood below).
    1. See 10.5 Robert Ewing Baldwin and Lydia Lutitia Ketron
      and 10.5 Robert Ewing Baldwin and Eliza Jane King in the "Baldwin galleries" section (below).
  9. "Sarah" and "Sarah J." and "Mary J." may be the same person or possibly were twins. The 1860 census data comes from a scan of "Schedule 3: Persons who Died during the year ending 1st June, 1860, in the Western District in the County of Lee State of Virginia" downloaded from Ancestry.com. Other data for Sarah, Sarah J., and Mary J. are as taken from unconfirmed transcriptions reported by FamilySearch. "20 Oct 1859" and "30 Oct 1859" probably reflect a transcription error. "S.R." is most likely a transcription error for "J.R."
    1. "Poor Valley" is in the "Western District" of "Lee County", Virginia.
    2. See 10.6 Sarah Baldwin in the "Baldwin galleries" section (below) for transcriptions of records.
      See Margaret Baldwin's children for images of records.
  10. Data for "Unnamed Baldwin son" are as taken from an unconfirmed transcription reported by FamilySearch.
    1. See 10.7 Unnamed Baldwin son in the "Baldwin galleries" section for transcriptions of records.
      See Margaret Baldwin's children for images of records.
  11. Newton Bascum Baldwin married Martha Ellen Steele, hence the "Baldwin-Steele" family and its descendants.
    1. See 10.8 Baldwin-Steele and related links at the top of this page for all photographs, genealogical records, and family stories about N.Bascum and M. Ellen (Steele) Baldwin.
  12. James married Nancy Ann McGee (1873-1946) on 4 August 1891 in McKee, Jackson County, Kentucky, and they had at least 8 children. By the 1900 census they had had 3 children of whom 2 survived. By 1910 census 4 of 6 children had survived, and after this they would have at least 2 more surviving children. James and Nancy are buried in McGee Cemetery in Jackson County, Kentucky.
    If the "James Baldwin" named on Margaret's death certificate was James Alfred, then it would appear that he was an undertaker as well as a farmer.
    1. See 10.9 Baldwin-McGee: James Alfred Baldwin and Nancy Ann McGee (below) for genealogical details and some photographs.
  13. Elihu Joseph was known as "Joe". He married Mollie W. Wilson (1893–1946) on 29 December 1917 in London, Laurel County, Kentucky. He was 52 and Mollie was 24 according to the 1930 census for the Second Civil District of Campbell, Tennessee. The census shows "Joseph" 63 with his wife "Mollie" 37 and 5 children -- "Joseph Jr." 11, "George" 9, "Ruby Lee" 6, "John B." 4, and "Clifford" 1. Joseph Jr. [Joseph Robert] was born in Idaho, Clifford in Tennessee. Elihu Joseph and Mollie, and the middle 3 children, were born in Kentucky, as were Mollie's parents. Elihu Joseph's father was born in Tennessee and his mother in Virginia. He was a farmer working on a general farm on his own account, but apparently he did not own the farm, and he was renting his home. Joseph was 52 when he first married and Mollie was 24, according to this census.
    1. See 10.10 Elihu Joseph Baldwin and Mollie Wilson in the "Baldwin galleries" section (below).
  14. Henry Clay was known as "Clay" or "H. Clay". He married Malinda "Linda" ("Lindy") H. Abrams (1880–1950) on 14 February 1898. They seem to have had 10 children, 2 of whom died in infancy.
    Linda, born on 18 August 1880, died on 16 May 1950 barely 10 weeks after Clay died, and she is buried with him at Medlock Cemetery in Annville in Jackson County, Kentucky.
    Henry Clay Baldwin's namesake was Kentucky's most famous Washington politician -- Congressman, Speaker of the House, and Secretary of State Henry Clay (1777-1852). H. Clay Baldwin himself, though mainly a farmer, served a two-year term as a Republican representative of the 80th District of Kentucky in the State House of Representatives from 1932 to 1933.
    Clay was "Uncle Clay" to Sadie (Baldwin) Williams and her sisters. See "Sadie" (above) for an account of his "southern hospitality" during her visit with him in 1947.
    1. See 10.11 Henry Clay Baldwin and Malinda Abrams in the "Baldwin galleries" section (below).
  15. Martha Ann Baldwin, called "Annie", married Samuel Moore (1872–1963) on 11 April 1889 at the home of her father John R. Baldwin of Jackson County, and in the witness of her brothers N.B. and James Baldwin. She appears to have had at least 11 children 9 of whom survived long enough to be enumerated on 1900-1920 censuses.
    1. See 10.12 Martha Ann Baldwin and Samuel Moore in the "Baldwin galleries" section (below).
  16. George married Emeline King (1875–1961), Eliza's younger sister, in 1898, and they had at least 10 children.
    The 1900 census shows him to be teaching, but later censuses show him as a farmer.
    His death certificate states that he died of heart failure due to over exertion. It says he was born in Tennessee to John Howard, born in Tennessee, and Margaret Howard, born in Virginia. The informant -- signed "Charlie Baldwin" of Peoples, Kentucky -- was probably George's son Charles.
    George and Emeline are buried in King Cemetery in Peoples, which is near Annville, in Jackson County, Kentucky. Charles (1912-2001) and his wife Flora Estridge (1922-2002), George's older brother Robert (1858-1942) and his wife Eliza (1873-1938), are also buried in King Cemetery.
    1. See 10.13 George Finley Baldwin and Emeline King in the "Baldwin Galleries" section (below).
  17. Samuel L.B. Baldwin used various versions of his name including Samuel Berton Baldwin, Samuel B. Baldwin, and S.B. Baldwin, but he also went by "Sam" and "Bert". He and Nancy Jane Smith had 4 children of whom 3 survived.
    1. See 10.14 Samuel L.B. Baldwin and Nancy Jane Smith in the "Baldwin galleries" section (below).
  18. Archelus was publicly "Arch". The 1900 census shows Arch (22) living with his parents, John and Margaret. His father was farming but he, like his brother George, was teaching.
    He married Martha Louverna Davis on 8 June 1907. By 1910 they had had 2 children of whom 1 survived, and by 1930 they would have 5 more. The 1910, 1920, and 1930 censuses show him as a farmer.
    Arch and Martha are buried together in Wilson Cemetery in Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky.
    1. See 10.15 Archelus Fernando Baldwin and Martha Louverna Davis in the "Baldwin Galleries" section (below).
  19. Charles or "Charlie" was born on 2 September -- in 1877 according to his death certificate, in 1878 according to his draft registration card, and in 1879 according to his headstone at Pilgrims Rest Cemetery in East Bernstadt, Laurel County, Kentucky. He died on 31 July 1944 according to his death certificate, and on 1 August 1944 according to his headstone.
    Charles's 1st confirmable wife was Cinthia Emma McDowell (1879-1916), with whom he had 7 children -- Stella [Stella Jane], Robert [Bob L.], Maggie [Margaret], Coy, Earnest, Eldon, and Maud [Maude, May]. His 2nd confirmable wife was Grace [Nancy G., Grace L.] [Fullington] [Fullerton] (1900-1980), with whom he had at least 5 more children. Some reports say he was also married to, or lived with, a Martha Combs, with whom he may have fathered children.
    Census and other data shows that Charles raised his children alone for at least 5 years between his marriages to Emma and Grace.
    1. See 10.16 Charles Nelson Baldwin and his families in the "Baldwin Galleries" section (below).

Top  

Chronology of Baldwin-Howard family

10. John R. Baldwin, Rebecca and Margaret Howard, and their children

John R. Baldwin seems to have fathered 3 children with his 1st wife, Rebecca Howard, and 12 (or 14) with his 2nd wife, Margaret Howard, Rebecca's younger sister. All of the 15 children listed in the table -- except Sarah -- are found on censuses. Their full names and many other particulars have been culled from various sources. Many but not all details have been confirmed by scans of official records.

Margaret Baldwin's children

Rebecca and Margaret were sisters. Rebecca had at least 3 children between 1849-1853. Margaret raised Rebecca's children in addition to the at least 12 she had with John.

"Heaven Sent", whose genealogy research includes the Baldwin line, has posted a scan of Margaret Baldwin's death certificate on the Internet. She also posted the following information about Margaret, which I have slightly edited and reformatted. The numbers, which are those I assigned the children in the above table, and the underscoring of the children who do not appear in the table, are mine.

Margaret Anne Baldwin was the daughter of John F. and Elizabeth Mark Howard. She married John R. Baldwin on 13 June 1855 in Harlan County, Kentucky. God blessed this marriage with the following children: (1) William Henley, (2) Robert Eqing [sic = Ewing], Clayton, Anne, (4) Newton Bascum, (5) James Alfred, (6) Elihu Joseph, (7) Henry Clay, (8) Martha A., (9) George F., (10) Samuel I. B. [sic = L.B.], (11) Archelus Fernando, and (12) Charles Nelson.

Heaven Sent appears to have listed the children in the order of their birth. Only Clayton and Anne are not found on any census. William Henley was born in March 1856 and Robert Ewing around 1858. And Newton Bascum was born in December 1862, James Alfred in April 1864, and all subsequent children only a year or two apart. This leaves roughly 4 years -- 1859-1863 -- between which to bear and lose two children.

Some lists of Baldwin children include a "(3) Sarah", who apparently was born and died in 1859. If "Clayton" and "Anne" or "Sarah" were in fact children of John and Margaret, then they died before the 1860 census (when they would have been about 1 year old), or before the 1870 census (when they would have been going on 10).

The 1900 and 1910 censuses state that Margaret had respectively 14 and 12 children of whom 11 survived. In addition to the children he had with with Margaret, John fathered 3 children (Elizabeth, John, and Mary) with Margaret's older sister Rebecca. A couple of the 14 children reported in the 1900 census may have been Rebecca's.

John R. Baldwin's family in 19th century censuses

The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County, Virginia, shows John R. Baldwin (22) farming with his wife Rebecca (22) and their daughter Elizabeth (1). Other sheets from the same Lee County census show Margaret (14) still living with her parents, John F. Howard (48) and Elizabeth (38), and 2 older and 5 younger siblings. Margaret in John F. Howard's household is shown as born in Virginia. Rebecca in John R.Baldwin's household was born in Kentucky.

Rebecca Baldwin died on 3 April 1855 according to Margaret's 1909 widow's pension eligibility declaration.

John R. Baldwin and Margaret Baldwin married on 13 June 1855 in Harlan, Kentucky.

The 1860 census for "Free Inhabitants" of the Jonesville post office area of the Western District of Lee County, Virginia, shows "John R. Balwin" [sic = Baldwin] 31, Farmer, with his wife "Margret" [sic = Margaret] 22, Housekeeper, and 5 children -- "Elisabeth L." 10, "John M." 8, "Mary E. D." 7, "Wm. H." 4, and "Robbert E." 3 -- and John R. Baldwin's younger brother "Thos. N." 16, Farm labor. Everyone in the household -- including Margaret -- is said to have been born in Lee County, Virginia. Elizabeth, John, and Mary are Rebecca's children. William and Robert are Margaret's children. "Thos. N." is John R. Baldwin's younger brother Thomas Newton Baldwin (1843-1924).

Family moves to Kentucky during Civil War

The Baldwin-Howard family moves from Virginia to Kentucky around 1863.

The 1870 census for the Gray Hawk Post Office area of Sturgeon Precinct No. 6 in Jackson County, Kentucky, shows "John R. Baldwin" 41 with is wife "Margaret" 35 and 8 children -- "John M." 18, "Mary E." 17, "William H." 14, "Robert E." 12, "Newton B." 8, "James A." (6), "Elihu J." 3, and "Henry C." 2. Two others -- "James N. Howard" 23 and "Sarah E. Thomas" 14 were also living with the family. John R. Baldwin is a farmer and Margaret is keeping house. Sons John, William, and Robert were farm laborers. James Howard, probably Margaret (nee Howard's) brother, was also a farm laborer. Sarah Thomas was a domestic servant. The household's real estate and personal property were valued at 400 and 250 dollars. Margaret and her youngest sons James A., Elihu, and Henry C. were born in Kentucky. All others in the household were born in Virginia. The two oldest children -- John M. and Mary E. -- are John R. Baldwin's children with his 1st wife, Rebecca (Howard) Baldwin (1828-1855), Margaret's deceased older sister.

The same enumeration sheet of the 1870 census for Gray Hawk Post Office area in Sturgeon Precinct No. 6, in Jackson County, Kentucky, shows John R. Baldwin's younger brother, Virginia-born "Thos. N. Baldwin", 24 years old, with his Kentucky-born wife "Emily C.", 21, farming and keeping house with 2 Kentucky-born children, "John C.", 3, and "Elizabeth A.", 1, and a Tennessee-born domestic servant, "Susan A. Thomas", 13.

By the 1880 census, Thomas N. Baldwin has moved to Raccoon Precinct No. 2 of Laurel County, Kentucky, where he is enumerated as "Newton Baldwin" 34, with his wife "Emily C." 33, and 6 children -- "John C." 14, "Elizabeth" 11, "Steven M." 9, "Lissie C." 7, "Martha" 11, and "Joseph" 2. Newton is a farmer, Emily C. is keeping house, John C. works on farm, and Elizabeth is at home.

Thomas Newton Baldwin was born on 29 October 1843 in Lee County, Virginia. He died on 10 March 1924 in Laurel County, Kentucky, where he is buried as "N. B." under a plain tombstone in Carrier Cemetery. His wife, Emily C. (Carrier) Baldwin, was born in 1847. She died in Laurel County in 1908, and she too is buried in Carrier Cemetery under a plain tombstone marked "E. B."

The 1880 census for Precinct No. 5, Enumeration District No. 50, Jackson County, Kentucky, shows "John R. Baldwin" 51 with his wife "Margaret" 44 and 9 children -- "Newton B." 19, "James A." 16, "Elihur J." 13, "Henry C." 12, "Martha A." 9, "George F." 7, "Samuel L. B." 5, "Archelus F." 3, and "Charles N." 8/12 year old. All but 2 of the surviving children John R. fathered with Margaret are enumerated here. John R., Newton B., James A., Elihur J., and Henry C. are "laborers" presumably on the family farm. Margaret is keeping house.

Enumerated immediately after John R. Baldwin's household is the household of "Elizabeth Steele", who is widowed, and 2 children, "John M. and "Martha E." Martha Ellen Steele would become the wife of Newton Bascum Baldwin on 15 December 1881 the following year. They would eventually settle in St. Maries, Idaho.

Margaret Baldwin's 1st son, William Henley Baldwin, is enumerated in another household on the same sheet as "William Baldwin", with his wife "Nancy J." and 3 children. They would eventually settle in Stites, Idaho.

Their 2nd son, Robert Ewing Baldwin, is enumerated in the 1880 census for Precinct No. 5, Magisterial District No. 7, Jackson County, as "Robert Baldwin", 22, the son-in-law of "Phiarzina Ketron" (57), who is widowed. He is shown after Phiarzina's son Nelson (17), and before his wife, Phiarzina's daughter "Liddia L." (31). Liddia died, leaving no children, and Robert would remarry Eliza Jane King. They lived in Jackson county for a while but resettled in Laurel County.

The 1890 census was mostly destroyed in a fire.

Neighboring Baldwin families in 1900 and 1910 censuses

The first two censuses of the 20th century show several children of the Baldwin-Howard family living as adults in separate households next door to each other.

The 1900 census for the 3rd Magisterial District, Pond Creek, of Jackson County, Kentucky shows -- on the same enumeration sheet -- three Baldwin households in a row.

  1. 1st Baldwin household   John R. Baldwin (71), head, born September 1828, farming, his wife Margaret Baldwin (64), and their 6th son, Arch [Archelus Fernando] Baldwin (22), teaching.
    John and Margaret had been married for 46 (or 47) years (the correction of the second digit is unclear), and she had borne 14 children of whom 11 survived.
  2. 2nd Baldwin household   George Baldwin (27), Arch's older brother, teaching, his wife Emaline [sic = Emeline] (24), and their 2 sons.
    George and Emma had been married for 2 years, and both of the children Emeline had borne survived.
    The 1910 census shows George (38) and Emma (34) living inn Horse Lick in Jackson County with all 7 of the children Emma had borne by then. Both of George's parents are said to have been born in Virginia.
    The 1930 census shows George (56) and Emiline [sic = Emeline] (54) still in the Rock Castle River area of Horse Lick with three children, all born after 1910.
  3. 3rd Baldwin householdN.B. Baldwin (38), George's and Arch's older brother, farming, with Ellen (36) and all 4 of their daughters.
    N.B. and Ellen had been married for 18 years, and all 4 of their children survived. See "Chronology of Baldwin-Steele family" below for details.

John R. Baldwin died on 10 March 1909. Margaret would live with a grandson next door to the households of other sons.

The 1910 census for the 3rd Magisterial District of Jackson County, Kentucky shows shows Margaret Baldwin living in the family of a grandson apparently next door to the households of two of her other sons. All three families were living on Terrell Creek Road, which was listed after Pond Creek Road.

  1. 1st Baldwin household   H. Clay Baldwin (42), a farmer, his wife Malinda (29), and the 4 surviving of the 5 children she had borne in their 11 years of marriage.
  2. 2nd Baldwin household   Charley Baldwin (30), a farmer, his wife Emma (29), and all 5 of the children she had borne in their 11 years of marriage. The youngest child is a 1-month-old nameless son who became Earnest.
    The 1930 census shows Charles Baldwin (51), a farmer, 19 when first married, with Grace (30), 18 when first married, and 7 children aged 19, 17, 14, 8, 6, 3, and 1-6/12. The youngest 4 children were probably Charles's children with Grace, assuming they married around 1918. On his 12 September 1918 draft registration card, Charles shows "Stella Baldwin" -- his daughter and first child with Cinthia Emma -- as his nearest relative. The census shows them living in Brodhead in Rockcastle County, Kentucky.
    1. Brodhead in Rockcastle County is close to the Horselick Creek area in Jackson County where the Rockcastle River divides the two counties.
  3. 3rd Baldwin household   Bradley Baldwin (21), a farmer, his wife Maude Baldwin (20), childless after 1 year of marriage, and Bradley's grandmother Margaret Baldwin (78), widowed, a mother of 12 children of whom 11 survived. Bradley is farming on his own account, on land he owns free of mortgage.

Margaret Baldwin died on 3 June 1912.

Top  

Baldwin, Howard, and other family names

In the English-speaking world, family names are acquired through birth from the father, and through marriage and adoption from the husband or adopting father. And family historians tend to focus on "lines" defined by the family names of parents, hence "Baldwin" and "Howard" if speaking of the "Baldwin-Howard" family. Yet John R. Baldwin was a "Baldwin-Steale" descendant, and Rebecca and Margaret Baldwin were "Howard-Mark" descendants. Hence every union of 2 parents represents unions of 4 grandparents, which represent unions of 8 great-grandparents, which represent unions of 16 great-great-grandparents, ad infinitim. There is no biological reason to focus on only one name, but social biases -- in particular the dominence of male lines -- lead many people to focus on the history of only their (usually) patrilineal family name.

Baldwin

Dictionary of American Family Names, Edited by Patrick Hanks and Flavia Hodges (1990, 2003, 2006), 3 volumes, Oxford University Press, gives the following description of the family name "Baldwin" (as cited by FamilySearch, viewed and copied 25 December 2019).

Baldwin

1 English: from a Germanic personal name composed of the elements bald 'bold', 'brave' + wine 'friend', which was extremely popular among the Normans and in Flanders in the early Middle Ages. It was the personal name of the Crusader who in 1100 became the first Christian king of Jerusalem, and of four more Crusader kings of Jerusalem. It was also borne by Baldwin, Count of Flanders (1172–1205), leader of the Fourth Crusade, who became first Latin Emperor of Constantinople (1204). As an American surname it has absorbed Dutch spellings such as Boudewijn .

2 Irish: surname adopted in Donegal by bearers of the Gaelic name Ó Maolagáin ( see Milligan ), due to association of Gaelic maol 'bald', 'hairless' with English bald.

forebears A John Baldwin from Buckinghamshire, England, arrived in the U.S. in 1638 and settled in Milford, CT.

Howard

Wikipedia gives the following account of "Howard" as a family name (viewed and copied 25 December 2019).

Howard

Howard is a common English surname. Its origins are uncertain. One theory is that it derived from the French personal name Huard and Houard (compare the Anglo-Norman spellings of coward for French couard; tower for tour) adapting after the Norman Conquest of 1066. Another theory is that its origin may be pre 7th century Germanic from the personal name Hughard (prefix hug, meaning "heart"/"spirit"; suffix hard, meaning "hardy"/"brave"). Yet another theory is that the surname derived from the Anglo-Scandinavian personal name Haward (Old Norse Hávarðr, Old Danish Hawarth, element Há(r) "high" or hǫð "battle"; element varðr, meaning "guardian").[1] The first public record of the surname is dated 1221 in Cambridgeshire. There are several variant surname spellings.[2]

Some writers report that "Howard" as either a family or given name is a conflation of two distinct but now homophonic names with a history of other pronunciations and spellings -- one "Hayward" from the title of a parish officer or warden in charge of the hedges (hay), fences, or other enclosures around a ward, parish, village or town, or public pastures -- the other from elements meaning heart, mind, and spirit (hug) and hardy, brave, and strong (hard) -- to put it most simply without several pages of obscure geographic and linguistic history. In other words, on its surface today, the name "Howard" reveals nothing about its origin or history, but is merely a fairly recent conflation of several spellings representing different origins and histories.

Variations

Most family names in English-speaking countries are not exclusively English. Many have origins in other languages, and those that originated in English make their way into other languages, where their spellings may change. The following table shows a few of the variations of "Baldwin" and "Howard" in other languages.

           Baldwin      Howard

Dutch      Boudewijn
English    Baldwin      Howard < eowu (ewe) + hierde (herd)
                          As name of keeper of female sheep
French     Beaudoin     Huard < OG Hugihard "heart brave"
           Baudouin
German                  Howard / Howart < ON "high (chief) warden"
                          Hereward "army guard" 
Icelandic  Baldvin
Italian    Baldovino
Spanish    Balduino

Top  

Bradley Baldwin

William Oconnel Bradley Baldwin

Who were Bradley Baldwin's parents?

According to a 1963 death certificate for "William Oconnel Bradley Baldwin", his mother was "Ann Baldwin" and his father was "? Taylor". This would suggest that, if he was in fact Margaret Baldwin's grandson, that his mother was Martha Ann Baldwin -- who did not marry Samuel Moore until 11 April 1889, about 14 months after Bradley Baldwin's birth on 22 February 1888. However, the death certificate does not establish that "William Oconnel Bradley Baldwin" is the "Bradley Baldwin" identified as Margaret Baldwin's grandson in the 1910 census. And a few other matters need to be considered. So let's pursue the trail of evidence -- back from the 1910 census, then forward to the 1963 death certificate -- and see where it leads us.

If Bradley Baldwin was a grandson of John R. Baldwin's widow Margaret Baldwin -- as stated in the 1910 census -- then he is either a son of one of her sons, or a son of her only surviving daughter Martha Ann Baldwin.

If Bradley Baldwin was 21 at the time of the 1910 census, then he was born around 1888-1889, and so he should be in the 1890 and 1900 censuses with his parents or guardians. But the 1880 census data is not available. And there is no Bradley Baldwin -- or Brad or William or William Oconnel or other likely person in a 1900 census for any of the Baldwin-Howard households that I can find.

Marriage dates of Baldwin-Howard children
and ages when Bradley Baldwin was born

The Age column in the following list shows the sibling's age at the time Bradley Baldwin -- presumed to be be William Oconnel Bradley Baldwin -- was born on 22 February 1888.

                        Age  Born-Died  Married
 1. Elizabeth Letitia   38  1849-1930  1870 J.M. Taylor
 2. John Milton         36  1851-1936  1880 Verena Marie McCoy
 3. Mary Ellen          35  1853-1909  1880 Zela Lewis
 4. William Henley      31  1856-1937  1875 Nancy Jane Robbins
 5. Robert Ewing [*]    29  1858-1942  1896 Eliza Jane King
 6. Sarah                   1859-1859
 7. Unnamed son             1861-
 8. Newton Bascum       25  1862-1919  1881 Mary Ellen Steele
 9. James Alfred        23  1864-1954  1891 Nancy Ann McGee
10. Elihu Joseph        21  1866-1942  1918 Mollie W. Wilson 
11. Henry Clay          20  1867-1950  1898 Malinda Abrams
12. Martha Ann          17  1870-1934  1889 Samuel Moore
13. George Finley       14  1873-1946  1898 Emaline King
14. Samuel L.B.         12  1875-1941
15. Archelus Fernando   11  1876-1935  1907 Martha Louverna Davis
16. Charles Nelson       8  1879-1944  1920 Grace Fullington

The 1890 census was mostly lost.

1900 census I can find no likely candidate for Bradley or Maude, or for a William, William Oconnel, or William Oconnel Bradley as either a Baldwin or a Taylor.

The 1900 census shows Martha Ann Baldwin married to Samuel Moore, living in Laurel County with 5 of their children.
This is 1 fewer child than the 6 children the census said had survived of the 7 children it said she had borne.
Could the missing surviving child have been Bradley Baldwin? He would have been about 12 years old.
See Martha Ann and Samuel Moore in censuses (below) for details.

John R. Baldwin died on 10 March 1909.

The 1910 census for Magisterial District 3 shows 3 Baldwin households living on Terrell Creek Road, which is enumerated immediately after Pond Creek Road.

  1. Household of John R. and Margaret Baldwin's son "H. Clay Baldwin" (42).
  2. Household of John R. and Margaret Baldwin's son "Charley Baldwin" (30).
  3. Household of "Bradley Baldwin" (21), a farmer, with his wife "Maude" (19), childless after 1 year of marriage, and Bradley's grandmother "Margaret" (78), widowed, a mother of 12 children of whom 11 survived. Bradley is farming on his own account, on land he owns free of mortgage.
Bradley Baldwin 1910 Bradley Baldwin with Maude and Margaret on Terrell Creek Road
In 1910 census for Jackson County, Magisterial District 3
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com

This is the first appearance of a "Bradley Baldwin" associated with the Baldwin-Howard family.

The datum for this census was 15 April. Hence Bradley -- if 21 as of this date -- was born between 16 April 1888 and 15 April 1889.
If born on or before 15 April 1888, Bradley would have been 22 years old or older

Margaret Baldwin died on 3 June 1912.

Baldwin fixing to move away"

Right   Article reporting community news from Bond, Jackson County in the "Eastern Kentucky Correspondence" column of the Thursday, 11 February 1915 edition of The Citizen (page 5). Copped and cropped from Newspapers.com

William Oconnel Bradley Baldwin

Below   1942 Selective Service Registration Card for "William Oconnel Bradley Baldwin". The earliest document on Ancestry.com to show "William Oconnel" in addition to "Bradley Baldwin". See his 1963 death certificate (bottom of this column) for another example. Whether Bradley Baldwin was given this longer name at the time of his birth, or whether he acquired it later in life, is not clear. It may have been inspired by the name of the late 19th-century Kentucky politician William O'Connell Bradley (see main text). Copped and cropped from Ancestor.com

Bradley Baldwin
Bradley Baldwin
Bradley Baldwin Nancie Maudie Baldwin's 1950 death certificate informed by Bradley Baldwin
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Bradley Baldwin William Oconnel Bradley Baldwin's 1963 death certificate informed by Audrey Music
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com

Audrey Music

Death certificate informants are generally family members or friends close enough to know more than just the name of the deceased. Audrey Music's relationship with W.O.B. Baldwin is not known, but she appears to have known things about him that a casual friend would not know. She was going on 28 when he died at 77. She could have been anything from a girlfriend to a caretaker. The death certificate states that Bradley Baldwin died in West Liberty Hospital. Audrey Music might have been a nurse or other hospital staff member that had reason to know enough about the circumstances of his life and death to act as informant.

The 1940 census for Floyd County shows (1935-1994) is "Audrey Joe Music" (4) as the 1st of then 3 children of "Theodore Music" (47) and his wife "Sara" (24). Theodore was a laborer doing government work, Sara was doing housework, and they were renting a non-farm home. He had 4 years and she 1 (one) year of schooling. Her name on Social Security records is "Audrey Jewell Music". She died in Paintsville, the seat of Johnson County, just north of Floyd, but is buried in Akers-Music Cemetery in Bonanza in Floyd County as "Audrey J. Music". She was born in Bonanza and her mother's maiden name was Sarah Akers. The bottom of her headstone reads "I Love You Mom".

1915 newspaper article   An article datelined Jackson County, Bond, 6 February 1915 -- published in the 11 February 1915 edition of The Citizen, a Berea County weekly paper, reported that "Bradley Baldwin is selling out and fixing to move away" (page 5 continuation of "East Kentucky Correspondence Column" beginning on page 8).

Berea is the county seat of Madison County, which shares a border with the northwest part of Jackson County The Citizen reported local community news for Jackson and other nearby counties in a column called "East Kentucky Correspondence".

Bond is less than 2 kilomters (about 1 mile) east of Annville, or roughly 10-11 kilometers (6-7 miles) north-northeast of Terrells Creek or Baldwin Branch.

When and why did Baldwin move?

Assuming the Bradley Baldwin of Bond in the 1915 article is the Bradley Baldwin who was farming on Terrell Creek Road in the 1910 census -- when and why did he move to Bond? Did he stay at the farm on Terrell Creek Road until Margaret died in 1912? And why is he leaving Bond only a few years in 1915?

1917 draft registration   A Form 1 Registration Card, signed on 5 June 1917 in Floyd County, Kentucky, show a "Bradley Baldwin" as a "Natural Born" citizen, born on 20 February 1888 in "Moores Creek" in Kentucky, USA, then living in Beaver in Floyd County. He was "Farming & Teaching" and self-employed. He was married claimed an exemption [from military draft during the Great War] on the grounds that he had a "Dependant wife" (original card). He was tall, of medium build, had brown hair and eyes, was not bald, and had no missing limbs or other disabilities. His "Race" was "Caucasian" and the "If person is of African descent, tear off this corner" tab in the lower-left corner of the form was intact on both forms.

Two versions

There are two versions of Form 1 Registration Card for Bradley Baldwin -- the original and a "true copy" of the original. The original is in two hands. Bradley's hand is evident in the "Name in full" and on the "Signature or mark" line. The "true copy" in an entirely differen cursive hand. The original has "Dependant wife" and the copy has "Dependent wife". British usage differentiates the condition of being dependent (adjective "dependent") and a dependent person (noun "dependant") the two. American usage generally uses "dependent" for both. So the "True copy" was has what is called a "copiest error" -- possibly an intentional "correction", possibly an inadvertent "error".

Floyd County is in the heart of Eastern Kentucky coal country, to the east of Jackson County, between Jackson County and Tennessee.

Beaver is an unincorporated community in Floyd County.

Moores Creek is about 5 kilometers (roughly 3 miles) southwest of Annville in Jackson County.

1920 census I can find no likely candidate for Bradley and Maude Baldwin in any Kentucky census.

The 1930 census for Magisterial District 4, Paint Precinct, in Morgan County, Kentucky, shows "Bradley Baldwin" 42 with his wife "Maud" 44. He was 20 and she was 22 when they married. They were renting their home, and he was working as a farmer on a general farm on his own account. Living with them was a niece "Mildred Mathews" 11.

"Mathews" was Maude's maiden name.

Morgan County northwest of Floyd County. Morgan County originated from parts of other counties, including an earlier larger incarnation of Floyd county, but is separated from Floyd County by Maggofin County. These and other adjacent counties are in the heart of Eastern Kentucky's coal mining region.

The 1940 census for Magisterial District 3 of Floyd County shows a "Bradley Baldwin" 52 with his wife Maude 54. They were renting a home on Clear Creek and he was employed as a "tiple [sic = tipple] worker" in a coal mine. Both had completed 8 years of schooling.

The tipple of a mine is where coal or ore extracted from the mine is loaded onto railroad hopper cars or other vehicles for transport. The census also specified jobs like "coal loader" and "mine forman".

Age difference discrepancies

The 1910 census shows Bradley to be 1 year older than Maude, whereas the 1930 and 1940 censuses show Maude to be 2 years older than Bradley.

1942 draft registration   A Department of Selective Service D.S.S. Form 1 Registration Card signed 27 April 1942 shows "William Oconnel Bradley Baldwin", age 54 [sic = 53], born on 22 February 1988 in Jackson County. His wife is "Maud" and they were residing in Fed in Floyd County. He was working for "Panes Babes Coal Co." He was 5'10-1/2" tall, weighed 200 lbs, had brown eyes and gray hair, a light complexion, and a "Scar side of right eye". The card is specifically for "Men born on or after April 28, 1877 and on or before February 16, 1897".

Hand writing

As is commonly seen on official forms filed by people with limited writing skills, all items on this form -- except the name box and the signature -- are written in a smooth cursive hand. "Bradley Baldwin" is printed in the name box in an awkward hand that confuses upper- and lower-case letters -- BRɑDley BalDWIN -- which uses the closed single-story "script ɑ" (more common in writing) in Bradley, and the open double-story "Latin a" (more common in printing) in Baldwin. "WilliAM OCONNel" is written above Bradley in the "First" part of the "Name (Print)" box. He has no "Middle" name, and signed his name "Brɑdley Bɑldwin" with closed spript style "ɑ" and only "B" is upper case, but the cursive has an angular quality about it.

The Department of Selective Service (DSS) oversaw thousands of draft boards in states and territories of the United States.

Nancie Maudie Baldwin dies on 13 March 1950 in Dungus in Morgan County, Kentucky.

A Commonweath of Kentucky Certificate of Death, informed by "Bradley Baldwin", states that "Nancie Maudie Baldwin" died in Dungus in Morgan County on 13 March 1950 from "Hypertensive H. [Heart] disease" due to "apoplexy". The typed certificate states that she had been living in Dingus for 21/2 years, was married, and was occupied as a housewife doing housework. She was said to have been born on 9 April 1887 in Clay County, Kentucky, and had lived for 62 years 11 months and 4 days. Her father's name was "Moses Mathew" and her mother's maiden name was "? Goforth". The funeral home was in West Liberty and her body was removed for burial in a family cemetery in Dingus on 15 March 1950.

1963 death certificate   A Commonweath of Kentucky Certificate of Death filed in Morgan County, Kentucky, on 14 January 1963 states that "William Oconnel Bradley Baldwin" died in West Liberty, Morgan County, on 10 January 1963, of "Cong. [congestive] failure" due to "Ca- [cancer] intenstines". His marital status was "widowed" and his occupation was "retired miner". He'd been residing in a home on a farm. His mother's name was "Ann Baldwin" and his fathers name was "? Taylor". He was born on 22 February 1888 in simply "Kentucky". The informant was "Audrey Music". His Social Security No. was "unknown" -- although other data shows that a Social Security claim was made by him, or in his name, on 25 February 1953. The death certificate states that he was buried in Baldwin Cemetery in Dingus on 14 January.

West Liberty is the county seat of Morgan County. It is roughly 130 kilometers (80 miles) northeast of Annville in Jackson County.

Dingus is an unincorporated community in Morgan County about 16 kilometers (10 miles) to the east of West Liberty.

Out-of-wedlock chronology

William Oconnel Bradley Baldwin's 1963 death certificate confidently identifies his mother as "Ann Baldwin" and equivocally names his father "? Taylor". Whatever the relationship between his parents, he appears to have gone by his mother's maiden name -- which suggests that he was an out-of-wedlock child of Martha Ann Baldwin, who went by "Ann" and "Annie".

The chronology makes the out-of-wedlock scenario plausible. Bradley was born on 22 February 1888, when Martha -- who was born on 3 July 1870 -- would have been 17 years, 7 months, and 15 days old. She married Samuel Moore on 11 April 1889, some 13 months and 10 days later.

Would the lost 1890 census have shown Bradley in the household of Samuel and Martha Ann Moore, as a child she brought to the marriage? Or in the household of his Taylor father? Or in the household of another relative, possible John R. and Margaret Baldwin?

William Oconnel Bradley Baldwin's namesake

Bradley Baldwin's full given and middle names -- William Oconnel Bradley -- may have been inspired by the name of the Republican politician William O'Connell Bradley (1847-1914) -- the Governor of Kentucky from 10 December 1895 to 12 December 1899, and a U.S. Senator from 4 March 1909 until his death on 23 May 1914. Bradley had served in the Union Army during the Civil War, and rose to political fame as a champion of the causes of Abraham Lincoln's Republican Party in Kentucky, which had tired to remain neutral at the start of the war but by 1863 had declared itself on the Union side.

Kentucky in many ways symbolizes the divide in various opinions over questions of slavery and secession. It was the birthplace of both Civil War presidents -- Abraham Lincoln on the Union, and Jefferson Davis of the Confederacy. Kentucky was the site of a number of skirmishes, while the vast majority of the battles in the war took place to the east in Virginia, to the south and southeast in Tennessee and North Carolina, and in states further south.

Some non-governmental groups in Kentucky sided with the Confederacy, but the state of Kentucky itself always remained in the Union and essentially backed the Union cause.

The following article offers a particularly interesting perspective on Kentucky's role in the Civil War.

A. C. Quisenberry
Kentucky Union Troops in the Civil War
Register of Kentucky State Historical Society
Published by Kentucky Historical Society
Volume 18, Number 54, September 1920
Pages 13-18
PDF JSTOR

Quisenberry estimates that "Kentucky furnished many prominent men to the Confederacy, as well as about thirty five thousand soldiers" (page 13), and that "Kentucky furnished 51,000 white volunteers and 23,000 colored-volunteers to the Union army -- a total of 74,000 troops" (page 13). Later in the article, after adding more troops to the Union side of the ledger, he concludes that, "If accurate figures could be obtained, it is believed that the number of Kentuckians who served the Union in the Civil War would not fall far short of 125,000" (page 14) -- which means (1) accurate figures cannot be obtained, and (2) the number would fall short of 125,000 -- qualifications which have been lost on Wikipedia and other sources which tend to stress inflated figures.

Top  

The question of Cherokee blood

Are Baldwin-King descendants part "Indian"?

The Baldwin and King families of Jackson County, Kentucky, appear to have been socially as well as geographically close. Two Baldwin-Howard sons, Robert Baldwin and George Baldwin, married King-Nichols daughters, Eliza and Emeline, and several King-related Baldwins are buried in the King Cemetery in Peoples in Jackson County.

Someone posting to a Baldwin message board claimed that "Emmaline King's mother was a full blooded Cherokee." The claim was made in reference to the wife of George F. Baldwin, a son of John R. Baldwin and Margaret Howard.

The 1870 and 1880 censuses do not support the "Cherokee" thesis.

The 1870 and 1880 censuses had 5 "Color" classifications -- White (W), Black (B), Mulatto (M), Chinese (C), and Indian (I).

1870 censuses for Eliza's and Emeline's parents

The 1870 census for Pond Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky, shows "Woodson T." (23), a farm laborer, as the oldest of 5 children still at home with "George W. King" (53), a farmer, born in Tennessee, and "Tabitha" (53), keeping house, born in Virginia. Everyone in the family is classified "W" under "Color".

The 1870 Pond Creek census also shows "Josephine" (18) as the 3rd of 9 children of "R.E. Nichols" (62), born in North Carolina, and "Emaline" [sic] (44), born in Tennessee. Everyone in the family is classified "W" under "Color".

1880 census for Eliza and Emeline with their parents

The 1880 census for "Ex. Dist. No. 57" of "Precinct No. 7" of Jackson County, Kentucky, shows "Eliza J." (6) and "Emaline" [sic] (5) among 3 other children of "Woodson T. King (33), a laborer, and "Josephine" (30), keeping house. The census states that Woodson was born in Tennessee to Tennessee-born parents, while Josephine was born in Kentucky to a father born in North Carolina and a Kentucky-born mother. Everyone in the family is classified "W" under "Color".

Josephine, born in 1851, died on 22 January 1941. Josephine's mother, Emeline Shiplett, born in Tennessee in 1835, died in Pulaski County, Kentucky, on 15 January 1905.

Woodson T. (1846-1931) and Josephine (1951-1941) share an erect King headstone in King Cemetery in Peoples in Jackson County, where both Eliza and Emeline are buried as "Baldwins" with "K" middle initials.

Cherokee blood

As for the "full blooded Cherokee" allegation -- the census "Color" classifications ascribed by census takers are "colored" by their own impressions and claims by informants, and not in and of themselves proof of biological descent. However, in the absence of positive evidence of Cherokee ancestry, the census classifications weigh against the claim that Josephine (much less her mother) was an "Indian" in the eyes of census enumerators.

One would think that a "full blooded" Indian of any tribal origin would have been physically distinct, and that -- according to the racialist principles of the "Color" classification scheme -- someone who was known to be, or seen or regarded as being, a "full blooded" Indian would have been classified as an Indian, and that halfbreeds would have been classified as Mulatto -- a common practice at the time.

Indians were not racially identified in the 1790-1840 censuses, which classified people by their status and/or color.

1810 Free whites, All other free persons, Slaves
1820 Free whites, Slaves, Free colored persons, All others except Indians not taxed
1830 Free white persons, Slaves, Free colored persons
1840 Free white persons, Free colored persons, Slaves
1850 Color White, black, or mulatto
1860 Color White, black, or mulatto
1870 Color White (W), Black (B), Mulatto (M), Chinese (C), Indian (I)
1880 Color White (W), Black (B), Mulatto (M), Chinese (C), Indian (I)
1890 Color or Race Whether white, black, mulatto, quadroon, octoroon, Chinese, Japanese, or Indian
1900 Color or Race Whether white, black, mulatto, quadroon, octoroon, Chinese, Japanese, or Indian

The 1850 and 1860 censuses were the first to identify people by color -- white, black, or mulatto. 1870 and 1880 censuses added Chinese and Indian, and the 1890 and 1900 censuses added quadroon, octoroon, and Japanese.

The 1850 census and subsequent censuses included "Indians" living in the general population. Most Indians in the general population were citizens of the United States -- unlike the "non-taxed" Indians who usually lived on reservations within tribal jurisdictions, or were otherwise enrolled as members of a Federally-recognized tribe and subject to special Indian censuses. Non-taxed Indians were nationals but not citizens, until the Indian Citizenship Act of 1924, which recognized all Indians as citizens.

Whether someone was tallied as "Indian" or as something else depended a lot on the enumerator, the community, the family, and the person. Indians in some southern states were apt to be classified as "mulatto", especially if they were perceived as being mixed, as the word was broadly used to mean anyone of mixed race. But an Indian might also be classified as "black" or "white" depending on perceptions. Some people who might have been classified as other than "white" passed as white, or were said to be white by their families.

Not a few family-tree genealogy enthusiasts search "in vain" for blood ties -- and now DNA links -- with history's famous and infamous, or with yesteryear's victims of discrimination and oppression. States like Kentucky -- through which many Cherokee and other Indians passed after the Indian Removal Act of 1830 -- especially on the mass exodus in 1838 along the fabled "Trail of Tears" -- are supposed to have witnessed many unions between Indians and whites and blacks.

Update

On 7 July 2017, a member of the Baldwin Genealogy group on Facebook, of which I became a member from 22 November 2018, posted an image from an Ancestry.com message board stating that "Emmaline King's mother was a full-blooded Cherokee." Another member replied that "My gr gr grandmother was Josephine Nichols, mother of Emiline [sic = Emeline] (Shiplett) King. My line is via Eliza Jane King, sister to Emiline, and wife of Robert E., Baldwin. Ancestry shows no Indian in me. However if you had seen my grandfather, her son you would swear to differ, but no Indian shown for me on Ancestry dna testing."

These are familiar experiences. There were "Cherokee blood" stories in a collatoral line of my Hardman-Hunter mother's Hunter-Thomas side -- not my Wetherall-Baldwin father's Baldwin-Steele side -- based on the stature, black hair, and high cheek bones of her first cousin once-removed Eleanor Theodosia (Thomas) Vincent (1916-2007). The cousin, more like a sister to my mother and an aunt to me, did extensive research on her family history, including trips back to North Carolina, Missouri, and Kentucky -- and ruled out Cherokee connections.

Appearances, too, can be deceptive. People seeing my maternal grandfather Owen Hardman when a younger man, and his wedding photograph with Ullie Hunter, think he looks "Indian". But he's not of Indian descent so far as I can tell, and there are no stories to that effect in the family. His oldest daughter, my aunt, characterized him as "Black Irish", through his mother, alluding to his black hair, steel gray eyes, and skin that deeply darkened from the sun. I too had dark hair and deeply tanned, to the point that I once played Pocahontas in a cub scout skit when living in San Francisco. Later in life, a passenger at a shuttle terminal in San Francisco asked me if I was on 60 Minutes, thinking I was Ed Bradley -- on account of stubbly salt-and-pepper hair and beard, and a tan and other facial features that apparently the man had seen as Negroid. Or perhaps it was the way I peered over my glasses, sitting off to the side with a lap top pretending to be a writer deep in thought.

Top  


Tsuyoshi DNA

Son's DNA report

MyHeritage, 26 December 2021

MyHeritage calls this an "Ethnicity Estimate"
At best, though, it's a guestimate of
the regional genetic origins of
ones ancestral lines

My son has legal nationality connections, and ethnic linguistic and sociocultural links, only with Japan and the United States of America. Biologically, his Japanese (mother's) ancestral lines probably include all or most of Japan's several older indigenous lines and several more recent continental lines. But they may also include some lines from other parts of the region and the world. His major American (father's) lines -- i.e., my lines -- appear to go back to various lines in Europe including the United Kingdom. But they may also intersect with some non-European lines.

Bloodlines, however, have nothing to do with "ethnicity" or "heritage" -- such as they are. Bloodlines cannot be parsed into discrete parts representing different "ethnicities" or "heritages". Genes determine anatomical traits and physiological conditions, and a range of related abilities -- including the ability to acquire the ethnic (linguistic and sociocultural) qualities of the locality where one is raised during ones developmental years, or where one settles later in life. Ethnicity, in other words, has nothing to do with genetic composition, and everything to do with life experiences -- which are unique and, at any moment of time, singular, whole, complete -- and more diverse and elastic for some individuals than other.

As a "legal person"
residing in Japan with Japanese nationality
my son is Japanese

Nationality, as a formal affiliation with a state, is a binary variable in that one either has or does not have a state's nationality. Like all such nationalities, Japan's nationality is a purely civil status having nothing to do with ethnicity as a sociocultural identity or race as a biological identity. In Japan, nationality is a legal artifact of possessing a family register in a Japanese municipality. While essentially territorial, it is acquired at birth mainly through family lineage but at times through place of birth, and later in life mainly through naturalization.

As an "ethnic person"
residing in Japan at this point in his life
my son is 100 percent Japanese and 20 percent American

Ethnicity is a variable that changes as one acquires and loses the sociocultural qualities and abilities that define the ethnicity -- the languages, literatures, laws, customs, beliefs, musics, and costumes that characterize the society associated with the ethnicity. As such, my son is primarily "Japanese" and secondarily "American". Were he to live in America, his "American ethnicity" would quickly develop more and his "Japanese ethnicity" would slowly atrophy.

DNA tests

DNA tests appear to be credible as measures of possible genetic connections down lines of biological descent. 3rd cousin matches seem to be fairly reliable, and reliability increases up the kinship chart, to the point that matches with half and full siblings, and parents, approach 100 percent certainty.

To the extent that so-called "ancestral regions" can be genetically mapped, then DNA tests may also be credible as measures of possible biological connections with anthropologically defined "geographical races", or politically defined "national populations", or socially defined "racioethnic groups" -- however, with the understanding that racialized biological connections are not measures of "belonging".

In other words, contrary to the claims of the companies that commercialize DNA tests for ancestry purposes, assessments of DNA -- a purely chemical condition -- are not indicators of "ethnicity" or "heritage", or of "race" or "nationality" -- all of which are anomalies of social (including cultural, political, and legal) conditions.

My son's DNA test experience

In 2020, my son had a DNA test which linked him with a 3rd cousin who had had a similar test. See DNA connections above for details.

The results were predictable. The regional DNA percentages showed the expected distribution of East and Central Asian versus European bloodlines. There were traces of other connections, including Papuan and Inuit, which marvelled my son -- until I told him that they were too small to warrant attention. I added that even the classifications with larger percentages of composition were not to be taken as evidence of ethnicity or heritage -- never mind the catchy characterization of the results as an "Ethnicity Estimate" (see right).

Results from different companies are notorious for their variations, especially with respect to compositions that amount to only a few percent. Overlap between the genetic patterns of all defined populations makes drawing lines difficult at best. And the algorithms used to parse a person's DNA into a list of "ethnicities" by percent of composition involve more art -- and even racial politics -- than science.

Many people have taken reports of small traces of one or another "ethnicity" too seriously -- never mind that DNA is at best a biological association with a geographically or anthropologically defined population -- not a measure of "ethnicity" or "heritage". But such buzzwords fuel the obsession with "race" and "roots" -- especially in America, where DNA technologies have been exploited by family history and genealogy companies as measures of "ethnicity" and "heritage".

I am very conservative when it comes to rules of evidence to support a claim of ancestral connection, whether biological or social. All forms of evidence have to be used with caution.

Documentary evidence can be faulty because claims on birth and death certificates can be false or misleading for any number of reasons. Family stories can also be faulty for many reasons.

DNA tests can contradict and upset documented and/or oral understandings of biological family ancestry. Test results can reveal unknown adoptions, baby mix-ups, and extramarital or premarital affairs. Some results have connected multiple half-siblings who had no idea they were conceived at a fertility clinic with the sperm of the same donor, who was socially the father of only the children he sired with his wife.

For people who know they were adopted, DNA tests have provided ways to circumvent agencies that refuse to open their files. For people raised by a single mother or father, who do not know their other parent, or who know of a twin or other sibling who was anonymously adopted by another family, DNA tests have hold out hope of finding the missing parent, brother or sister.

But DNA labs that market their tests as indicators of "ethnicity" or "heritage" are making false promises. For biological descent, even when plausibly confirmed, is not the same as "belonging" to an "ethnic" or "heritage" group whose members claim to be the determiners of membership. To put it differently -- DNA tests signify biological conditions -- whereas "identity" in the sense of "belonging" is a social (political) condition.


My son and Elizabeth Warren

Elizabeth Warren in the United States reportedly claimed to be of part Cherokee ancestry on the basis of a family story and a DNA report (see next). The question arises -- what if my son, on the basis of his DNA "ethnicity estimate", were to claim to be "Irish, Scottish, or Welsh"? If not also "Papuan" or "Inuit"?

What if my son -- as a spoof of such proof of his self-styled "ethnicity" -- wore a green kilt made of Welsh wool over a pair of seriously distressed original button-fly 501 Levis inherited from his father -- with a happi sporting his mother's Sugiyama-crest -- and Nez Perce moccasins, inspired by the fact that his paternal grandmother grew up on a homestead on the Nez Perce Reservation, and wore moccasins made by the Nez Perce parties who traded them to her father for his deer hides -- not to mention that his father, yours truly, this writer, collected Nabisco Shredded Wheat Straight Arrow Injun-uity Cards, wore feathered headresses around the house and neighborhood, played Poccohantas in a cub scout skit, and to this day treasures a book about Chief Joseph given him by his maternal grandmother on his 10th birthday, and learned Japanese from a professor in the Oriental Languages Department at the University of California at Berkeley who happened to be the foremost authority on the Nez Perce language and a translator of oral Nez Perce narratives?

Should real Irishmen, real Scotsmen, real Welshmen, and real Nez Perce reel with offense -- and chastise my son for ethnic imposture and cultural appropriation?

My son has never experienced what it's like to be Irish, Scotish, Welsh, Papuan, or Inuit. He's never applied for membership in presentday Irish, Scotish, Welsh, Papuan, or Inuit tribal or national entities.

For fleeting moments while pondering the implications of his DNA report, he's only imagined what life would have been like had he been born into and raised within such ethnic communities.

He understands that his racial (biological) identities are essentially meaningless -- based as they are on DNA associations with historically racialized geographical regions that have nothing directly to do with his actual legal nationalities and actual functioning ethnicities -- which are "Japan" and "America".

True ethnicity

My best definition of "ethnicity" is where one functions to the point of feeling at home -- whether in one's cradle of birth if one was raised and remains there -- or elsewhere, if ones parents migrated when one was young, or if one was adopted and raised by someone elsewhere -- or, if later in life, one migrates to and settles in another locality or country.

Ethnicity is umbilically linked with the sort of neurological capacity that defines the human condition -- abilities that transcend and supercede both legal status and biological race -- the capacity to absorb and learn family, neighborhood, regional, and national languages and shared behaviors and beliefs, especially when young but throughout life.

To the extent that a person assimilates, embodies, mediates, expresses, and identifies with the local conditions of ones existence, including the languages, behaviors, and sentiments of another human community, the person acquires the "ethnicity" or "ethnicities" of the community. Ethnicities, to the extent that they are real and animate sociocultural (including linguistic) behaviors, are are formed through sociocultural experiences and observable in behaviors.

As a variable, ethnicity is a measure of "ethnic competency". Mathematically, ethnicity is a vector, and its magnitude changes as one acquires and loses the abilities to function under the sociocultural conditions that essentially define the ethnicity -- the languages, literatures, laws, customs, beliefs, musics, and costumes that characterize the society associated with the ethnicity.

As such, my son is primarily "Japanese" and secondarily "American". He is 100 percent at home in Japan in that he can reflexively function in Japan's mainstream -- understand, relate to, and respond to the full range of ordinary conditions one has to navigate when living in Japan. He would probably feel about 20 percent at home in America, as he speaks and understands a lot of English and has visited America a few times, sometimes for several weeks, once for a few months. Yet he would encounter a lot of English and many situations that would not make immediate sense to him. And many Americans would perceive his lack of reflexive "nativity" in Americanese and American life.

The "100 percent" and "20 percent" figures are assessments of my son's ability to function in Japan and America as an "ordinary person" in the respective country -- regardless of nationality, which is a civil status -- and regardless of biological descent or "race" in its narrow sense, which is best regarded as an independent variable along with nationality and ethnicity.

Were my son to live in America rather than just visit every few years, his American ethnicity would quickly and significantly increase. He might someday approach 100 percent or "typical American". Or he might plateau at 80 percent of typical American sociocultural competency.

In the meantime, if my son, while living in America, never returned to Japan, or infrequently returned only to visit, his Japanese ethnicity would atrophy as a result of what he lost and/or failed to gain by being out of touch with a constantly changing country.

True ethnicity, in other words, is not a binary-state variable like nationality, which one either has or doesn't have, obtained through legal procedures at birth or later in life. Ethnicity is more like a set or array of variables that acquire values through life experiences -- learning and practice -- digestion, assimilation, acculturation, accommodation, and adjustment, and maintenance.

Ethnicity, once gained, has to be maintained. Like muscles built through exercise, you continue to use them or lose them.

Ethnicity as competency

As a "legal person" residing in Japan, I am Japanese. I am Japanese because I possess a family register affiliated with a local (municipal) polity in Japan's sovereign dominion. Japan's territorial family registers are tantamount to nationality regisiters. In other words, Japan's nationality comes and goes with territorial affiliation with Japan in the form of a family register in a territory under Japan's sovereign control and jurisdiction.

Having a valid family register is proof of nationality and the singular requisite for obtaining a Japanese passport, which I have. Japan's nationality, like all such nationalities under international private law, is a purely civil status, entirely without ethnic or racial qualifications or significance. Historically, ethnicity and race have had little standing in Japanese law, and from its inception in the late 19th century, Japan's nationality laws have been entirely civil.

As an "ethnic person" in Japan, I am probably around 60 percent Japanese and 70 percent American. These are purely private concerns, not matters of law or policy.

"60 percent Japanese" is up from 0 percent when I first came to Japan, and "70 percent American" is down from 100 percent when I left America.

These numbers signify my overall "ethnic competency" in Japan and America -- not where I now feel most comfortable.

Linguistically I use mainly Japanese in my daily life and research and am able to deal with all situations, though some require study and preparation. I long ago reached a plateau of non-native competency in Japanese, but at a level far below my native English ability. The later, however, has suffered because I haven't maintained the degree of American cultural and social literacy I had at the time I settled in Japan in the mid 1970s. Newer aspects of American life are alien to me. When visiting America, I inevitably have to ask a lot of "fresh off the boat" questions. My ignorance immediately signals to others that, never mind my seemingly native American English, I might not be American.

Unlike when I first came to Japan, I now feel less tense when landing in Japan than when landing in America. I look forward to visiting America, but then look more forward to returning to Japan. America feels like a place I've been in the past and know well. Japan feels like a place I may not know as well as America but want to be and feel more at home.

This is what "ethnicity" actually is. It's not DNA. It's not nationality. It's a mix of competency and feeling at home.

For some people -- like Elizabeth Warren (see next) -- it may be an "ancestral identity" linked with a "family story" bolstered by a DNA report. For me and my son, however, it's a lot more than just family lore or DNA ancestry. It's the ability to "function" and "feel at home" somewhere.

Ethnicity as memory

The variables of ethnicity include emotional elements, such as memories of past experiences conveyed by family stories. To the extent that the foundation of a memory conveyed in a family story is factual, the account of the past is factual. But memories of the past can be distorted by romantic and bitter sentiments. And story tellers may indroduce totally imaginary elements that are perceived as facts rather than fabrications.

Family histories embrace all manner of stories -- whether the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth -- or taller or shorter than the truth, if not entirely false. Some stories are subject to "fact checking". Others are beyond the ability to vet and validate.

Some "Cherokee blood" stories can be proven true or untrue. Others will remain in the "who knows" bin.

Even when true, however, a biological (racial) ancestral link is not the same as ethnic (sociocultural) competency, much less of legal (political) belonging.

Top  


Elizabeth Warren Images of documents related to Elizabeth Warren's
revision of her "Ethnicity" classification on
University of Pensylvania personnel records

Copped and cropped from Ethnicity not a factor in Elizabeth Warren's rise in law
By Annie Linskey, Boston Globe, 1 September 2018

The case of Elizabeth Warren

The politics of DNA nativity testing

In the fall of 2018, Elizabeth Warren (b1949), a Senator for Massacheusetts, while campaining for the Democractic Party candidacy in the 2020 presidential election, became a target of attacks and criticism from President Donald Trump and others -- not all Republicans -- who ridiculed or criticized her claim that she was of "part Cherokee heritage", or otherwise questioned her motives for making the claim. A year later, on 19 August 2019, at a presidential forum on Native American issues held in Sioux City, Iowa, she publicly apologized for her past claims of Native American ancestry.

In October 2019, days before announcing her bid for the Democratic candidacy, Warren released the results of a DNA examination, which suggested that she had a quantum of Native American blood that originated 6 to 10 generations ago -- i.e., 1/64th (1.6 percent) to 1/1024th (0.1 percent) Native American blood -- which centers on 8 generations or 1/256th (0.39 percent). Other reports put the range at 1/32nd (3.1 percent, 5 generations) to 1/512th (0.2 percent, 9 generations).

Warren publicized the results of the DNA analysis, partly through a staged video conference with the Stanford genetics professor she commissioned to analyze her blood. This got her into trouble with some tribal governments and other critics of DNA tests as qualifiers for claiming Native Ameican identity. Shortly after this, she apologized both for the DNA test and for identifying herself as a Native American after first classifying herself as white, while a law professor. She insisted though -- and a Boston Globe investigative career report agreed -- that she had always been hired as a "white" or "caucasian" and not as a "Native American". This, though, also posses a problem -- namely, that race should matter in the selection of a law professor, if not in the selection of any professor.

A 19 August 2019 report in The New York Times by Thomas Kaplan included the following remarks about reaction from some quarters to Warren's apology.

Elizabeth Warren Apologizes at Native American Forum: 'I Have Listened and I Have Learned'
By Thomas Kaplan
Aug. 19, 2019

[ First part of article omitted ]

Ms. Warren, who has said she learned of her Cherokee and Delaware ancestry through family lore, angered some Native Americans with her decision last year to use a DNA test to provide evidence of Native American descent. Though Ms. Warren did not claim citizenship in any tribe, a Cherokee Nation official said at the time that "using a DNA test to lay claim to any connection to the Cherokee Nation or any tribal nation, even vaguely, is inappropriate and wrong."

Joseph M. Pierce, 36, a citizen of the Cherokee Nation who did not attend the forum but watched Ms. Warren's remarks and tweeted about them, said Ms. Warren had eroded tribal sovereignty "by taking into her own hands the ability to determine who is and who is not Cherokee." He said of Ms. Warren's apology, "It's not enough for me."

"It seems like she's not willing to really engage or name, even, the harm that she's caused," he said in an interview. "The harm is that she has shifted the conversation towards DNA testing, towards biology, towards family lore."

[ Rest of article omitted ]

See the full article at
www.nytimes.com

Warren reportedly "deleted a Twitter post where she spoke about her 'Native American ancestry' and DNA . . . The post, which was made one year ago . . . and had over 56,000 likes read, 'My family (including Fox News-watchers) sat together and talked about what they think of @realDonaldTrump's attacks on our heritage. And yes, a famous geneticist analyzed my DNA and concluded that it contains Native American ancestry.'" (Charlie Nash, 16 October 2019, www.mediaite.com).

A year before this, Ellen Goldbaum reported as follows in a University of Buffalo UBNow article.

The View
Warren's use of DNA test indicates lack of sensitivity, UB geneticist says
By ELLEN GOLDBAUM

Published October 17, 2018

"I was personally dismayed when I heard she had done this."

That was the first response UB professor James N. Jarvis had when he learned that Sen. Elizabeth Warren had taken a DNA test, presumably to provide evidence that she is of Native American descent.

Jarvis, who is of Akwesasne Mohawk ancestry, is a professor of pediatrics in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB. He is the former chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Native American Child Health, and has worked on American Indian and Alaska native child health issues for more than 30 years.

"This is exactly the kind of thing that tribes have been trying to discourage, as it impinges on their sovereignty," he says of Warren's use of the DNA test. "It's up to the tribe to say who is a member and who isn't."

He notes the fact that Warren had specifically said the DNA test proves she has some Cherokee ancestry was disturbing because, as a statement from the tribe pointed out, DNA testing cannot identify individuals as members of tribes.

As a geneticist, Jarvis says the reliability of DNA testing is also uncertain, especially where Native American ancestry is concerned.

"I don't know how many Native American specimens are in any of these databases, and if they are there, I'm not sure that those specimens are being used legitimately. I don't think any tribe would permit people to come onto their territory to say, 'Can we collect some of your DNA for ancestry.com?' We don't know the circumstances under which those specimens were collected and was there tribal input."

He says the fact that Warren went ahead with the DNA test revealed a lack of understanding of the complex issues around Native American ancestry and DNA testing. "The fact that she did it was almost prima facie evidence that she isn't very connected culturally to how delicate an issue is the use of DNA from Native Americans," he says.

[ Rest of article omitted ]

See the full article at
UBNow
University at Buffalo
The State University of New York

Strum 2011 Tallbear 2013

Circe Sturm's Becoming Indian, 2011
"The Struggle over Cherokee Identity in the Twenty-First Century"
Examines "race shifting" -- used here to mean growing up "white" and later adopting a "Native American" identity on the basis of a family story and/or a DNA test, on ones own authority, without validation through tribal vetting resulting in recognition and acceptance as a citizen of the tribe

Kim TallBear's Native American DNA, 2013
"Tribal Belonging and the False Promise of Genetic Science"
Examines the manner in which family history websites and DNA testing companies have conspired to nurture and commercialize the racialist belief that Native American identity is a matter of ancestry validated by genetic biology -- rather than a matter of possessing the citizenship of a sovereign native nation

Yosha Bunko scans

The faces of racialism

No case better dramatizes the pathological consequences of racialism -- the belief that there are races, and the formation, expression, and defense of racial identities.

The belief that there are races is passively acquired while growing up in the language of a society of people who have learned to racialize themselves and others. Racialization becomes both habitual and customary -- reflexive, expected, and accepted -- and socially, politically, and economically exploited.

Critics of Warren's behavior made three points.

  1. Warren had no business claiming Cherokee ancestry in the first place because the stories she heard in her family were false. Her family has been white, and she is white.
  2. Regarding DNA results as tantamount to heritage or identity, as though tribal ancestry and membership are determined by race or biology, is wrong. Only affiliation based on recognition by a tribe, exercising its sovereign right to determine its membership, generally through objective assessments of kinship, gives an individual the right to identify with the tribe.
  3. Claiming identity without formal recognition subverts the principle of self-determination implicit in the notion of tribal sovereignty.

Warren never questioned the "legitimacy" or "validity" or "appropriateness" of race boxes. She grew up with them -- took them for granted. She denies that she "gamed" them -- "played" them to her advantage in a system that ranks some races higher than others on a scale of favourability. But on a scale of fashionability -- she publicized her family story and took pride in its implications of ancestry -- which was racialist if not racist.

Warren based her claims on family lore -- a story told her by her mother, apparently by way of explaining high cheek bones in the family. When Donald Trump called her "Pochohantas" and challenged her to prove her claim, she took a popular discover-your-roots DNA test and posted the results -- which, on the surface, suggested that she had a fraction of Cherokee blood in her veins.

"What do the facts say?" she asked one analyst on camera. "The facts suggest that you absolutely have a Native American ancestor in your pedigree," the analyst replied. The ancestor was said have been in the range of from 6 to 10 generations ago.

So there it was. Being Cherokee was reduced to a question of DNA. Never mind that the reduction of identity to DNA took the form of guesswork based on racialized assumptions about what constitute "Cherokee" genetic traits, compounded with statistical speculation about when the ancestor whose bloodline putatively had such traits mated with someone from another bloodline and created the bloodline that eventually contributed to Warren's bloodline.

Enter representatives of the "Cherokee nation", who strongly objected to Warren's citation of her DNA profile as a vindication of her claim to be of part Cherokee descent -- as though to say DNA tests, and not tribal vetting and recognition, determined whether she had to the right to identify as Cherokee. If so, then the very existence of genealogical DNA tests, which reduce genetic data to "ethnicity" and "heritage", threatens to usurp the sovereign right of every tribe to determine its own membership.

Legally, recognized Native American nations, as self-governing semi-sovereign entities, have the right to determine who belongs to the nation or tribe. This right is equivalent to the right of every sovereign state to determine who qualifies for its nationality and a passport. Just as no sovereign state would tolerate another state or 3rd party telling it who belongs to its affiliated nation, no legally recognized Native American tribe can countenance DNA test results as evidence of membership.

Warren, however, has countered -- fairly I think -- that she has never sought or claimed affiliation or membership. She has only claimed ancestry, based on family lore and what she perceives as DNA evidence that -- though it fails to absolutely corroborate the family story -- stops short of debunking it.

Cherokee representatives acknowledge Warren's public admissions that she identifies as a "white woman", has never claimed to be a "tribal citizen", that only tribes can determine membership, and that DNA is not a token of native identity. In other words, being Cherokee -- Cherokee identity -- is not a matter of race or ancestry, but a status determined by sovereign tribes based on treaty and other formal arrangements with the federal government (in the case of federally recognized tribes).

Some tribal representatives, however, resent the fact that Warren still cherishes the story in her family about having a Cherokee ancestor. They want her to renounce her family story as false -- as an encouragement to other white families with similar stories to denounce them.

The complexity of the Native American DNA controversy echoes the complexities of American-style "identity politics" generally. The commercialization of the rapidly developing science of DNA testing, to exploit the expanding and lucrative genealogy market, which feeds the romanticization of links with victims of genocide and slavery, is a relatively minor issue. The most emotional issues are these.

  1. self-determination Tribes have a sovereign right to determine who belongs to the tribe. Tribal membership -- tribal citizenship -- is a political construction based on kinship, among other social and legal qualifications -- not race.
  2. authenticity Who is and isn't "Native American" is a matter of collective tribal recognition. Non-native people do not have the right to stylize themselves as native on account of a family story or DNA test.
  3. identity Only authentic Native Americans have the right to claim and mediate -- as opposed to "appropriate" -- the culture and heritage of their tribe as a "self-determined" people.

But here's the rub . . .

Reducing identity to a matter of tribal sovereignty is fine -- if one overlooks a few demographic facts that favor the Warrens of the world. Tribal memberships today are largely based on kinship trails leading back to 19th-century and early 20th-century "Indian Rolls". The rolls were created by federal government agents, who registered Indians when removing them from their homelands to a reservation, or Indians residing on a reservation, or Indians residing off a reservation but enrolled as a member of a tribe in order to benefit from Bureau of Indian Affairs and other programs available only to enrolled members.

These are the most salient problems when it comes to understanding the limitations of "Indian rolls" as a necessary and sufficient requisite for claiming ancestry -- speaking only of ancestry and not ethnic (sociocultural) competency or legal (political) affiliation.

  1. Some Indians left their tribe before the tribe was removed and were not subject to tribal enrollment.
  2. Some Indians evaded enrollment because they didn't support the tribal decision to submit to enrollment.
  3. Some Indians were residing in areas not reached by government agents.
  4. Some Indians married into non-Indian families, and some Indian children were adopted by non-Indian families,
    and thereby lost the tribal affiliations that may have claimed them before their marriage or adoption.

The ultimate questions, then, are these.

  1. Do governments of legally recognized Native American tribes -- never mind their sovereign right to determine membership qualifications -- have the right to tell the Warrens of the world that they must disavow their "family stories" on the grounds that such stories, when told by "whites", are ipso facto romantic projections, hence false?
  2. While sovereign tribes have the right to dissociate membership from biology -- an attitude that a number of ethnic interest groups would do well to emulate -- do they have conclusive evidence that DNA testing cannot reveal probable biological descent from an ancestor who belonged to an historical tribe?

Top  

John R. Baldwin in the Mexican War of 1846-1848

John R. Baldwin (1828-1909) served in the Mexican War from 1847 to 1848
He received a pension as a veteran, in the end as an invalid, from 1887 to 1909
Margaret Baldwin (1835-1912) received a pension as a widow from 1909 to 1912

Military records show that John R. Baldwin (1828-1909), born in Lee County, Virginia, died in Jackson County, Kentucky, served as a Private in a U.S. Army infantry regiment from 1847-1848 during the Mexican War of 1846-1848, mustering in when 18 and mustering out when 19. Veteran records show that he qualified for a pension from 1887 until his death in 1909, and that Margaret Baldwin (1835-1912), as his widow, continued to receive 3/5ths of his pension until she died in 1912. Records show that John R. Baldwin applied for certification as an "invalid", though the grounds for his claim, and when it was recognized, is unclear.

Baldwin 1847
Baldwin 1847

Descriptive and Historical Register of Enlisted Soldiers of the Army, Continued →
No. 919, Baldwin, John R., 18, Hazel, Sandy, Fair, 5-11, Virginia, Lee, [Occupation unread], [April 1847] 24th, Manchester, [Enlisted by whom "Cpt. unread"]

Baldwin 1847
Baldwin 1847

Continued →for during the War with Mexico, under the Acts approved January 19th and February 11th, 1847
[No. 919, Baldwin, John R.] 16th Inf E, 5 Aug 48, Termination of War, blank, blank, blank, blank, at Newport Ky a Pvt.

John R. Baldwin in Mexican War

Enlistment 24 April 1847 to 5 August 1848

U.S. military records (above and right) show that John R. Baldwin (1828-1909), age 18, Hazel eyes, Sandy hair, Fair complexion, 5 feet 11 inches tall, born in Lee County, Virginia, enlisted in the U.S. Army, in Manchester [Kentucky], on 24 April 1847, which practically a year to the day that the war began on 25 April 1846. Baldwin served in Company E of the 16th Infantry Regiment, and he was discharged as a private at Newport, Kentucky, on 5 August 1848 -- 6 months after the end of the war on 2 Febraury 1848 (see above and right images of records).

Note that "Race" is not recorded on the Mexican War enlistment register.
"Race" was added as a category of description on military service records during the Civil War (see below). Military service registration forms in later wars, including World War I and World War II, included race, stature, eyes, hair, complexion, and distinguishing marks.

Top  


John R. Baldwin's Mexican War time line

The above profile of John R. Baldwin, when he was 18 and 19, fits within the following time line.

22 Sep 1828 (0) Born in Lee County, Virginia. Some records say Kentucky, and one says Tennessee, but most say Virginia.
1830 census (1) Presumed living in household of father John M. Baldwin (1802-1855) and mother Elizabeth Seale, probably in Lee County, Virginia (record not yet found, but even if found, it would list only the head of household).
1840 census (11) Presumed living in household of father John M. Baldwin in Lee County in the Western District of Territory of Virginia (record names only the head of household).
24 Apr 1847 (18) Enlisted in U.S. Army in Manchester, Clay County, Kentucky.
Apr 1847 to Aug 1848 (18-19) Served with E Company of 16th Infanty Regiment during Mexican War.
5 Aug 1848 (19) Discharged at Newport, Campbell County, Kentucky.
Fall 1848 to Winter 1849 (19-20) Married Rebecca Howard (19-20) in Harlan County, Kentucky, or in Lee County, Virginia.
26 Aug 1849 (20) Birth of daughter Elizabeth Letitia (Taylor) in Virginia.
1850 census (22) Living with Rebecca and their daughter Elizabeth in District 31 of Lee County, Virginia (1 Oct 1850). Parents and 7 younger siblings also enumerated in District 31 of Lee County (26 Sep 1850).
3 April 1855 (26) Rebecca died (age 26) according to her sister Margaret's 1909 widow's pension eligibility declaration. See John R. Baldwin in the Mexican War of 1846-1848.
13 Jun 1855 (26) Married Margaret Howard (19) in Harlan County, Kentucky.
1860 census (31) Living with Margaret Howard and 6 children in the Jonesville Post Office area of the Western District of Lee County, Virginia (6 Jul 1860).


12 Apr 1861 (32) Civil War begins at Fort Sumter in South Carolina
24 Dec 1862 (34) Birth of Newton Bascum Baldwin, the last Baldwin-Howard child to be born in Virginia.
See John R. Baldwin's Civil War time line for a more detailed chronology of his life from 1859 to 1870, immediately before and shortly after the Civil War.
1863 (34) John R. Baldwin "removed to Owsley County Kentucky" from Lee County, Virginia, according to Margaret Baldwin's 1909 widow's pension eligibility declaration. See John R. Baldwin in the Mexican War of 1846-1848.
Jan-Jul 1863 (34) Baldwin-Howard family moves from Virginia to Owsley County, Kentucky.
Jul-Aug 1863 (34) Civil War register of persons subject to military service places "John R. Balden" [sic] -- 34, White, Farmer, Married, Virginia-born -- in 6th Sub-District, Owsley County, Kentucky (see below).
23 Apr 1864 (35) Birth of James Alfred Baldwin, the first Baldwin-Howard child to be born in Kentucky.
1865 (36-37) John R. Baldwin "removed from [Owsley County Kentucky] to Laurel County Ky.", according to Margaret Baldwin's 1909 widow's pension eligibility declaration. See John R. Baldwin in the Mexican War of 1846-1848.
9 Apr 1865 (36) Civil War ends at Appomattox in Virginia


1868 (39-40) John R. Baldwin "removed from [Laurel County Kentucky] to Jackson County Ky.", according to Margaret Baldwin's 1909 widow's pension eligibility declaration. See John R. Baldwin in the Mexican War of 1846-1848.
1870 census (41) Living with Margaret and 8 children in the Gray Hawk Post Office area of Sturgeon Precinct No. 6 in Jackson County, Kentucky (10 Jul 1870).
1880 census (51) Living with Margaret and 9 children in Precinct No. 5, Enumeration District No. 50 [Pond Creek] of Jackson County, Kentucky (2 Jun 1880).
27 Jan 1887 Promulgation of Mexican War pension act (Chapter 70) authorizes a monthly benefit of $8.00 to qualified surviving Mexican War veterans and widows. Click to read pdf text of act (copped from Library of Congress).
14 Feb 1887 (58) John R. Baldwin filed for Mexican War pension pursuant to Act of 29 Jan 1887. Class Mex Serv [Mexican (War) Service], Application 257, Certificate 9707. He was 18 and 19 years old when he served and was then 58.
13 Nov 1889 (61) Filed for Inv (Invalid) class pension, Application 25,303, no certificate number. Presumably this application was approved, after which the status of "Invalid" augmented the "Mexican War Service" status recognized by Certificate 9707. Presumably the "Invalid" (Army Invalid) status was abandoned when John R. Baldwin died, as Margaret qualified for only "Mexican War Widow" (Army Widow) status under Certificate 15,268..
1890 census (61) Mostly destroyed by fire.
28 Aug 1890 (62) Filed for Invalid class, Application 931,021, no certificate issued. This application is clearly linked with Certificate 9707, but no mention of it is made on the few other documents that have come to light of the numerous documents that must have been generated from John R. Baldwin's initial pension application to the notification of Margaret's death..
1900 census (71) Living with Margaret and their son Arch in Magisterial District 5, Pond Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky (15 Jun 1900).
3 March 1903 (74) Pension act (Chapter 1021) increases monthly benefit for surviving Mexican War veterans to $12.00.
6 June 1906 (78) A private act (H.R. 16992, Private No. 2736, Chapter 2934) authorizes the Secretary of Interior to "place on the pension roll . . . the name of John R. Baldwin, late of Company E, Sixteenth Regiment United States Infantry, war with Mexico, and pay him a pension at the rate of twenty dollars per month in lieu of that he is now receiving" [$12.00] (see scan of act below).
27 June 1906 (58) John R. Baldwin, classified as an ARMY INVALID under MEXICAN WAR law issued a certificate pertaining to increase in pension to $20.00 commencing 6 June 1906.
10 Mar 1909 (80) John R. Baldwin passes away. He is buried on 12 March according to report dated 13 March in 18 March 1909 edition of The Citizen.
27 Mar 1909 Margaret Baldwin notifies pension office of John R. Baldwin's death.
26 Apr 1909 Date of Margaret Baldwin's notarized widow's pension eligibility declaration, stamped "1 May 1909". See John R. Baldwin in the Mexican War of 1846-1848.
1 May 1909 Margaret files an application (19,306) for recognition as a "Mex Wid".
13 Jul 1909 Margaret issued certificate (15,268) recognizing her as an ARMY WIDOW under MEXICAN WAR law. She qualifies for a $12.00 monthly benefit commencing 11 March 1909.
1910 census Margaret enumerated as "Grand Mother" in the household of Bradley and Maude Baldwin residing on "Terrells Creek Road" in the Magisterial District 3 in Jackson County, Kentucky (15 Apri 1900).
3 Jun 1912 Margaret Baldwin passes away in Voting District 2 in the city of Moores Creek in Jackson County, Kentucky. According to her death certificate, informed by her son A. F. [Archelus Fernando ] Baldwin of Moores Creek, she was buried the following day in Moores Creek. The undertaker was James Baldwin of Moores Creek -- presumably her son James Alfred Baldwin.

Top  


Geography

The enlistment record states that John R. Baldwin was born in Lee County, Virginia, which is in accordance with most census and other records. Later records show his presence in Harlan County, Kentucky, which is immediately north of Lee County. Manchester is the county seat of Clay County, a hop west and skip north of Harlan and Lee counties. Annville, in Jackson County, is another hop west and skip north from Manchester. Jackson County was created in 1858, a decade after the Mexican War, from parts of Madison, Estill, Owsley, Clay, Laurel, and Rockcastle counties, which surround it. John R. Baldwin mustered out at Newport, Kentucky, in Campbell County, on the Ohio river, which marks Kentucky's northern border with Ohio. Presumably he made his way back to Virginia, where he married Rebecca Howard, who appears to have been from Harlan. He was living in Owsley County, immediate north of Clay County and east of Jackson County, when registered during the summer of 1863 as a person subject to military duty during the Civil War (see below). In other words, John R. Baldwin's "niche" was a relative tight cluster of counties where Western Virginia shakes hands with Eastern Kentucky.

Top  


Mexican War and politics

Today, in the United States, the Mexican War (1846-1848) -- as it was long called in America -- is better known as the "Mexican-American War", while in Mexico it may be called "Intervención Estadounidense en México" (United States Intervention in Mexico). The later is closer to the geopolitical truth, given America's territorial ambitions and the willingness to achieve them militarily. Both the United States and Mexico, of course, represented expansionist colonial interests that originated in Europe. It was very much a "survival of the fittest" clash of raw military power. In many senses, the borderlands between the United States and Mexico are still contested territories, in an age in which migration, language, and culture "trump" police and military force.

Top  


16th Infantry

The nature of John R. Baldwin's military duties in the 16th Infantry are not clear. The regiment did not exist at the start of the Mexican War and did not survive the war. And it appears to have been the 3rd U.S. Army unit to be dubbed the 16th Infantry, according to Monte Sourjaily Jr. ("The Question of CARS: Can the Combat Arms Regimental System be made a useful tool that provides a link with the past and a stake in the future?", in Army, Vol. 11, No. 1, August 1960, page 24, highlighting mine).

   There have been five 16th Infantry regiments since 1798, with no historical connection between them.
   The first 16th Infantry was constituted on 16 July 1798, never organized, and on 15 June 1800, finally discharged (disappearing forever from the Army's rolls). The second 16th Infantry was constituted on 11 January 1812 and, in 1815, was consolidated with regiments then designated 6th, 22d, 23d and 32d to form the 2d Infantry (which has continued under this designation to the present). Some of the War of 1812 battle streamers displayed on the colors of today's 2d Infantry were partly earned by what was, from 1812 to 1815, the 16th Infantry.
   The third 16th Infantry was created for the Mexican War on 11 February 1847 and disbanded on 10 August 1848, joining in oblivion the first regiment to bear this designation. Still a fourth 16th Infantry was constituted for the Civil War on 3 May 1861. . .

In other words, the "16th Infantry" regiment to which John R. Baldwin was assisgned as a soldier in E Company was a one-off deal, unrelated to similarly designated units in earlier or later periods. The dates on which he is recorded to have mustered in and out of the 16th Infantry of the Mexican War era are neatly bracketed by the reported dates of creation and disbandment of the regiment.

Top  


Mexican War in National Archives

The National Archives of the United States has a webpage guide called "Records of United States Regular Army Mobile Units, 1821-1942". The guide includes the following items (my highlighting).

391.5 RECORDS OF THE INFANTRY
1815-1942
2,286 lin. ft.


History: Army organized into seven infantry regiments, 1815, with 8th Infantry Regiment added, 1838. Mexican War expansion added eight regiments (designated 9th-16th Infantry), 1847, but these were discontinued, 1848. Two new regiments (9th and 10th) were added, 1855, and nine additional regiments were constituted, May 1861 (11th-19th), and confirmed by an act of July 29, 1861 (14 Stat. 279). In a major expansion under General Order 92, War Department, November 23, 1866, pursuant to an act of July 28, 1866 (14 Stat. 332), 2d and 3d battalions of the existing 11th- 19th Infantry Regiments were designated 20th-37th Infantry Regiments, with four new regiments (38th-41st) to be composed of black enlisted men, and new 42d-45th Infantry Regiments for wounded veterans of the Civil War. Reduced by consolidation to 25 regiments, under General Order 17, War Department, March 15, 1869, with the 24th and 25th constituting the black enlisted force. Expanded to 30 regiments by the Army Reorganization Act (31 Stat. 748), February 2, 1901.

[ Omitted ]

391.5.2 Records of infantry regiments raised prior to the Civil
War, except regiments raised exclusively for Mexican War service


Textual Records: Regimental, battalion, company, and detachment records, including letters sent and received, correspondence, general and special orders, descriptive books, returns, and histories, of the 1st Infantry Regiment, 1827-1918; 2d Infantry Regiment, 1815-1920; 3d Infantry Regiment, 1822-1919; 4th Infantry Regiment, 1821-1917; 5th Infantry Regiment, 1821-1917; 6th Infantry Regiment, 1817-1909; 7th Infantry Regiment, 1842- 1914; 8th Infantry Regiment, 1838-1917; 9th Infantry Regiment, 1862-1904; and 10th Infantry Regiment, 1855-1916.

391.5.3 Records of infantry regiments raised for the Mexican War

Textual Records: Records of the 9th-16th Infantry Regiments, 1847-48, including letters sent, and regimental and company descriptive books.

Top  


1906 Private Act for John R. Baldwin

The private act raising John R. Baldwin's Mexico War pension is listed on page xlviii (48) of cx (100) pages of (110) pages of list of private acts. John R. Baldwin's act is 1 of 66 acts listed on the page, all of which involve pension increases effective from 6 June 1906. Some of the pension recipient have female names, presumably of qualified widows. Most of listed private acts are for pensions, and the vast majority are effective from 6 June 1906. And there are other lists. John R. Baldwin is not being singled out for special congressional recognition. He is merely a name on a list of veterans already receiving pensions.

Relevant Mexican War pension laws appear to have given the Secretary of the Interior discretionary authority to approve pension increases. Local pension officials could not grant increases on their own authority, assuming automatic application of pension laws. They had to refer applications to the Department of Interior for departmental vetting and pro forma approval by the Secretary of the Interior. Hence the requirement that Congress pass private bills authorizing the Secretary of Interior to grant the requested increase. And private bills -- like public bills -- had to be promulated by notification in the Congressional Record.

Today any number of similar private bills could be batched processed electronically using a pensioner data base and a program to generate a suitable official notice for each pensioner. At the turn of the 19th-20th centuries, battalions of typesetters and proofreaders were employed to produce the lists, which were ultimately published by the Government Printing Office, as follows.

The Statutes at Large of the United States of America
From December, 1905, to March, 1907
Concurrent Resolutions of the Two Houses of Congress
and
Recent Treaties, Conventions, and Executive Proclamations
Edited, Printed, and Published by the Authority of Congress
Under the Direction of the Secretary of State
VOL. XXXIV -- IN THREE PARTS
Book 1
Pages 1,427-2,224
PART 2
Private Acts and Resolution and Concurrent Resolutions
Washington
Government Printing Office
1907

Top  


Bureaucracy in action

The federal government approved or disapproved about 36,000 Mexican War pension applications between 1887 and 1926. Surviving records are housed by the U.S. National Archives and Records Administsration (Nara) in 946 linear feet, 8 linear inches of materials in 2164 Standard Legal Archives Boxes (the figures seem odd). The Mexican War archives are described in part as follows (see National Archives Catalog for details).

Case Files of Mexican War Pension Applications , ca. 1887 -- ca. 1926

[ Omitted ]
Other Title(s): Case Files of Mexican War Pension Applications (Consolidated), 1892-1926 Case Files of Pension Applications Based on Service in the Mexican War, 1846-1848; Mexican War Military Pension Application Files; Mexican War Pension Applications
Function and Use: These files were created to hold applications and supporting documentation of claims authorized by an act of Congress approved January 29, 1887 (24 Stat. 371), which provided pensions for veterans who had served in the Mexican War for 60 days or for their widows, not remarried.
General Note(s): Pension claims were disapproved or rejected if the service of the veteran could not be verified; if the injury, disability, or death was unrelated to military service; or if the veteran on whose service the claim was based deserted or was dishonorably discharged. Claims for pensions were abandoned if the veteran died and left no other dependent.
[ Omitted ]

The paper trail shown in the above images, copped and cropped from genealogy websites, represents only a fraction of the paper generated in the labor intensive bureaucratic process of keeping track of the pensions received between 1887 and 1912, first by John R. Baldwin as a surviving veteran of the Mexican War, then by Margaret Baldwin as a surviving spouse of a deceased veteran.

Multiply the numbers of application forms and benefit payout records by 36,000 Mexican War veterans and widows, and by the number of pensioners in earlier and later wars, and you get some idea of what "government" actually is. In some sense, the costs of all past wars continue to increase in the budgets required to maintain the archives of their records and provide public services to family history and other reseachers today.

The above images of the record for John R. Baldwin have been clipped from the following record
Click on the following image of the record for a higher resolution view
Copped, cropped, and reduced in size from FamilySearch
which see for an extra-high resolution image

Baldwin 1847
Baldwin 1887-02-14 1887 Feb 14 Filing
Mex Serv, Application 257, Certificate 9707
[Congressional] Act 29 Jan 1887
Mex Wid, Application 19,306, Certificate 15,268
[Congressional] Act 29 Jan 1887
REMARKS O.W. [Old War] Inv. [Invalid] Abandoned 25,303
Copped and cropped from FamilySearch
Baldwin 1889-11-13 1889 Nov 13 Filing
Inv. [Invalid], Application Ab [Abandoned] 25,303, Ky
REMARKS: Mex Serv  Cft 9707 
Mex Wid A [Application] 19,906  Cft 15,268 
Copped and cropped from FamilySearch
Baldwin 1890-08-28 Above
1890 Aug 28 Filing
Invalid Application 931,021
REMARKS Mex War  Ctf 9707 
Right below
 Certificate 9707  ARMY INVALID MEXICAN WAR
Class Inc [Increase]  Rate 20 , Commencement 6 June 1906
Certifate issued 27 June 1906
Fees Atty [Attorney] none
Transferred from: Louisville, Ky
Died 10 March 1909, Notified 29 March 1909
W [unread] Cft issued July 13, 1909
payable to wid Margaret Baldwin
Pensioner died 10 March 1909
Copped and cropped from FamilySearch
Baldwin 1906-06-06
Baldwin 1909-05-01 Above
Soldier John R. Baldwin
Dependent Margaret Baldwin (Widow)
Mex Serv Application 257  Certificate 9707 
[Congressional] Act 29 Jan 1887
1909 May 1 Filing
Mex Wid Application 19,306  Certificate 15,268 
[Congressional] Act 29 Jan 1887
REMARKS OW [Old War] Inv [Invalid] Aban 25,303
Right above
Margaret Baldwin
 Certificate 15,268  ARMY WIDOW MEXICAN WAR
Class Orig  Rate 12  Commencement 11 March 1909
Certificate dated 13 July 1909, Fees Atty none
Transferred from Louisville Ky, Died 11 June 1912
Copped and cropped from FamilySearch
Baldwin 1909-1912 card
Baldwin 1908-1909 payouts Click on image to enlarge
Record of payouts to John R. Baldwin
Shows payments of $60/quarter at $20/month rate
from 3rd Quarter of 1908 to his death during 2nd quarter of 1909
 Certificate 9707 
Copped and cropped from FamilySearch
Baldwin 1909-1912 payouts Click on image to enlarge
Record of payouts to Margaret Baldwin
Shows payments of $36/quarter at $12/month rate
from John R. Baldwin's death on 10 March 1909
to Margaret's death on 3 June 1912
 Certificate 15,268 
Copped and cropped from FamilySearch
Baldwin 1909 Click on image to enlarge
Margaret Baldwin's 26 April 1909 pension eligibility declaration stamped 1 May 1909
Part of her application as successor to John R. Baldwin's Mexico War pension
Copped from Baldwin Geneology Group on Facebook
as posted by Gen Highland from another source

BelowTranscription of Margaret's pension elegibility declaration

State of Kentucky, Jackson County

On this 26th. day of April A. D. 1909, personly [sic] appeared before me a Notary Public, within and for the County and State aforesaid, and duly authorized to administer oaths, Margaret Baldwin, aged 73 years, a resident of Moores Creek Jackson County Kentucky, who being duly sworn according to law, [makes] the following declaration in order to obtain Pension under the acts of Congress granting [pensions] to the widows of soldiers and sailors who served in the war with Mexico.

That she is the winow of John M. Baldwin who was a private in Co. A. 16th. Regt. United States Inft. in the war with [M]exico. That at the time of his enlistment he was about 5 ft. 10 Inches high, hazel eyes, fair complexion, and by occupation a farmer. And who was honorably discharged thereupon in the year 184[8]. ([Dosen't?] remember th[e] exact time in this year, and can only state from memory, as his Discharge Certificate is on file in Pension Department at Washington[.])

Enlistment register (see image and transcription above) shows "11 inches" and discharge on "5 Aug 48" at "Newport Ky". John R. Baldwin was probably transported to Newport by boat on the Ohio river. From Newport he made his way back to Lee County, probably via Harlan, possibly via Cumberland Gap. Sometime that fall he married Rebecca Howard, probably in Lee county, possibly in Harlan.

Said soldier was born in Lee County Virginia on the 21st. day of September 1828, and after leaving the service he resided in Lee County Va. untill the year 186[3?], when he removed to Owsley County Kentucky. He removed from there to Laurel County Ky. in 186[5?]. And from there to Jackson County Ky. in the year 186[8?], where he resided until his death.

John R. Baldwin's tombstone states "Sept. 22, 1828".

That she was married to [said] soldier in Harlan County Kentucky, the 13th. day of June 1855, by Rev. Solomon Pope. (Who is now dead.) under the name of Margaret Howard. That she had not been previously married, and has not re-married since his death. The said soldier had been previously married to Rebecca Ann Howard, who died in Lee County Virginia April 3rd. 185[5?].

The marriage register reads "Solomon Pope, M.M.E.S." -- apparently referring to Elizabeth Susan (Ball) Pope (1815-1906), the wife of Solomon Pope (1812-1883).

That her said husband died in Jackson County Kentucky on the 10th. day of March 1909. That he was a Pensioner of the United States [unread word] Certificate No. 9707 [payable?] at the Louisville Ky. Pension Agency at the rate of $20. per month. And that there was no legal barrier to her marriage to said soldier. And that she was never divorced from him.

The ever-important "Certificate No." was easily confirmed from documents Margaret undoubtedly had at her disposal. The certificate was issued when John R. was approved for the pension in 1887. The $20 dollar/month rate was the result of upgrading from $12 dollars/month in 1906. Margaret, as a widow, received $12/month until her death in 1912. The benefit was paid quarterly, 3 months at a time, through the nearest office of the pension agency.

The said soldier [unread words] [unread age] years of age. [Unread words].

And that [unread words].

And that she [unread words].

[Signed] Margaret Baldwin

[Signed] Add Steele
[Signed] W.H. Steele

[Stamped]
1 May 1909

Add and W.H. Steele are Margaret's "nephews-in-law" -- nephews of her daughter-in-law, Newton Bascum Baldwin's wife Martha Ellen (Steele) Baldwin -- son's of Martha Ellen's older brother James H. Steele -- thus 1st cousins by blood or in-law of all 2nd-generation descendants of the Steele-Grubb and Baldwin-Howard families in Jackson County -- and there were many.

Baldwin 1907 Above, Right, Below
Private Acts among Statutes of the United States
Including 1906 acts related to Mexican War
Screen captured from Google Books
Baldwin 1907

Above Screen capture of title page (left) and page xlviii of table of contents (right) of
The Statutes at Large of the United States of America, From December, 1905, to March, 1907
Washington, Government Printing Office, 1907 (see fuller particulars in text to left)
Below Screen capture of 6 June 1906 Private Act granting John R. Baldwin an increase of pension
FIFTY-NINTH CONGRESS. Sess. 1. Chps. 2930-2934. 1906. Bottom of Page 2037.

Baldwin 1907

Top  

John R. Baldwin and the War of the Rebellion of 1861-1865

No evidence (yet) of John R. Baldwin (1828-1909) in military service during the Civil War
His brother Thomas N. Baldwin (1843-1924) served in the Confederacy from 1861 to 1865

As of this writing (2021), only about 20 percent of surviving Civil War pension records have been digitalized on specialized military record websites like Fold3. Currently available records show many John Baldwins and several John R. Baldwins in Union and Confederate military units -- but no John or John R. Baldwin corresponding to John R. Baldwin (1828-1909) of the Baldwin-Seale and Baldwin-Howard families of Virginia and Kentucky. There is speculation that he served, and that his service was rewarded by grants of land in Kentucky. But available documents support only his service in the earlier Mexican War before he married Rebecca Howard.

After Rebecca's death, John R. Baldwin married her sister Margaret Howard, and they were living in Lee County, Virgina, when the Civil War started. But his war pension records, and records of payouts to Margaret as his widow, show only the Mexican War.

A military service eligibility record for Kentucky, however, shows that in July-August 1863, at the age of 34, while residing in Owsley County in the 8th Congressional District of Kentucky, a Union state, "John R. Baldin" from Virgina -- presumed to be "John R. Baldwin" of the Baldwin-Howard family -- was registered as a Class A male "subject to do military duty between the ages of twenty and thirth-five".

Civil War records also show that John R. Baldwin's younger brother, Thomas N. Baldwin (1843-1924), enlisted in a Confederte infantry regiment in Virginia, served all but the first few weeks of the war, and witnessed the end of the war as a corporal.

Selected Civil War participation cases

The following cases of Civil War participation are introduced in this section.

Other John R. Baldwins (Confederacy)

Halltown John R. Baldwin
Richmond John R. Baldwin

Neither of these John R. Baldwins is the John R. Baldwin of the Baldwin-Seale and Baldwin-Howard families.

John R. Baldwin's youngest brother (Confederacy)

Thomas N. Baldwin (1843-1924)

Thomas Newton Baldwin is John R. Baldwin's 3rd younger brother in the Baldwin-Seale family.

John R. Baldwin's brother-in-law and nephew (Union)

James Alvin Thomas (1827-1861)
Henry Clay Thomas (c1845-1904)

James Alvin Thomas is the husband of Mary Ann Baldwin, hence John R. Baldwin's and Thomas Newton Baldwin's brother-in-law.
Henry Clay Thomas is James and Mary Thomas's son, hence JR and TN Baldwin's nephew.

Husbands of Baldwin and Grubb widows (Confederacy, Union)

Moles brothers
William Hamilton Moles (1834-1864)
Elihu Hardin Moles (1838–1890)

William Moles is the husband of Archibald Grubb's 2nd widow Nancy (Markham) Grubb.
Elihu Moles is the husband of Archibald Grubb's daughter Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin, the widow of William Baldwin, John R. Baldwin's 1st younger brother.
Nancy (Markham) (Grubb) Moles is Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles's step-mother.

John R. Baldwin in Civil War

Did John R. Baldwin (1828-1909) of Lee County, Virginia and Jackson County, Kentucky -- the husband of first Rebecca Howard (1828-1855) and then her sister Margaret Howard (1835-1912) -- serve in either a Union or Confederate military unit during the "War of the Rebellion" -- later the "War Between the States" -- today just the "Civil War"?

The short, provisional answer is "No." As of this writing (January 2020), no documentary evidence has come to light that John R. Baldwin was involved in military activites during the Civil War. He does, however, seem to appear in an 1863 register of men in Kentucky eligible for military service.

There are numerous soldiers named "John Baldwin" and not a few named "John R. Baldwin" or "Jno. R. Baldwin" or "J.R. Baldwin" in military records. None, though, appear to be the John R. Baldwin that was residing in Lee County, Virginia with Margaret and several children in the 1860 federal census.

The stories of two other John R. Baldwins from Virginia, as told through Confederate military records, exemplify the experiences of Virginians who served the Confederacy during the war. And the military records of John R. Baldwin's younger brother Thomas N. Baldwin (1843-1924) show how he served the Confederacy after enlisting in Lee County the 2nd year of the war.

See William E. Wetherall in Civil War
on the Wetherall-Beaman page for
the story of John R. Baldwin's counterpart on
the Wetherall side of the Wetherall-Baldwin union.

John R. Baldwin enrolled

The images to the right show the cover and a leaf from the following register of Civil War enrollments.

Title slip

RG-110 RECORDS OF THE PROVOST
          MARSHAL GENERAL'S BUREAU
          (CIVIL WAR)
Records of Office Subdivisions, 1862-66.
Enrollment Branch, General Records,
Enrollment Lists and Reports
Enrollment Lists and Corrections to
Enrollment Lists, 1863-65
VOL 861           NM-65, E. 172
Ky. [Kentucky]    Vol. 1 of 3
8 C.D. [Congression District]
Class 1
A-K

Cover title

Consolidated List
    Class 1.
  8th District
    Kentucky

Page 23

Page 23 defines the record as follows ([underscoring] and [bracketed information] mine).

Class I comprises all persons subject to do military duty between the ages of twenty and thirth-five, and all unmarried persons subject to do military duty above the age of thirty-five years and under the age of forty-five.

Class II comprises all other persons subject to do military duty.

SCHEDULE I: CONSOLIDATED LIST of all persons of Class I, subject to military duty in 8th Congressional District, consisting of the Counties of Estile Owsley and others State of Kentucky, enumerated during the month of July & August, 1863, under direction of Capt Robert Hays, Provost Marshal.

RESIDENCE: 8th District / Owsley County Ky
NAME: [Line] 9. Balden [sic] John R.
DESCRIPTION
Age 1st July, 1863: 34
While or Colored: White
Profession, Occupation, or Trade: Farmer
Married or Unmarried: Mar'd
PLACE OF BIRTH
(Naming the State, Territory, or Country: Virginia
FORMER MILITARY SERVICE: Blank
REMARKS: Blank

To Colonel James B. Fry
Provost Marshal General U.S.
Washington, D.C.

Station: Headquarters 8th Congr. Dist. of Kentucky
Date: February 1st, 1864
Robert Hays / Capt. Provost Marshal

Top  


Baldwin, Balwin, and Balden

The 1860 census for Jonesville Post Office in Lee County, Virginia, enumerated John R. Baldwin as "Balwin". Margaret is "Margret", and the spellings of the given names of a couple of the Baldwin children also differ from how their names were spelled in the family. Such descrepancies abound in historical documents.

John R. Baldwin was written "John R. Balden" in a register of Class 1 males enumerated in Kentucky District 8 in 1863. I first saw an image of the register on the Baldwin Genealogy Facebook page, which focuses on the Baldwin-Howard family.

There was some discussion among the Baldwin-Howard descendant "cousins" on the page, including yours truly, as to whether "John R. Balden" was "our" JRB. The consensus was that the age and date and place fit JRB, and that "Balden" was probably an error for "Baldwin".

I chipped in as follows with my usual "over-kill" analysis (Facebook, Baldwin genealogy, 9 January 2018.

Yes, it looks like our JRB, though there are a few problems.

This is a summary of registration information compiled from other records, presumably cards that have been sorted by the first letter of the family name for each county. Names beginning with "B" are grouped together county by county but are not ABC sorted within the "B" group.

Registrations are for the 8th Congressional District for Kentucky, and registrations on this page include parts of the registrations from Estill and Owsley counties.

The registrants are "Class 1" meaning "all persons [men] subject to do military duty between the ages of twenty and thirty-five years" [including 20 and 35].

Registrations listed on this page took place in July-August 1863.

John R. Balden [Baldwin?] is the first listed registrant for Owsley county registration. Assuming that JRB would not have misspelled his own name, then the error could have been made on the original record by a clerk preparing the record from orally provided information, or by the copyist who compiled the list from the original records.

The age datum taken as 1 July 1863, though some parts of the list appear to include men registrered before 1 July. Age 34 as of 1 July 1863 agrees with JRB's 22 September 1828 birth.

Place of birth, occupation, and marital status agree with our JRB.

"Former military service" is blank, though according to a private bill approved many years later, our JRB -- among many other men -- receives a pension increase on account of recognition of service during Mexican War.

So long as there is no other "John R. Baldwin" of similar description, we can accept this John R. Baldwin as our JRB. The question then is whether and how he actually served.

At the time of the registration, JRB is 8 years into his marriage to Margaret. He's got a large and growing family to feed including his children with Rebecca. He's nearly too old for Class 1 registrants. My impression is that the war, for Kentucky, had passed its peak, and Kentucky has weighed in on the Union side after trying to remain neutral. The register would have been used to call men for Union service. Where, though, would JRB have stood on the war? Would he have waited to be called for Union service or volunteered? Or, if faced with the prospects of Union service, would he have left home to join a Confederate unit? John Milton, his oldest son, born to Rebecca, was only 11. His sons with Margaret, William Henley and Robert Ewing, were 7 and 5, and my paternal great grandfather Newton Bascum was barely half a year old. James Alfred, born the following year, was conceived about the time of this registsration.

Many families were in similar circumstances. What stories, if any, survive among JRB's descendants in Kentucky? Nothing has come down my grapevine about either Baldwin or Steele participation in contemporary wars. Only detritus and stories about Henry Clay's political achievements survive in my records. William Henley settled in Idaho, not far from where Newton Bascum settled, nearer to where my mother was born and raised. He'd been in Idaho about 10 years before Bascom arrived, and presumably the brothers got together now and then, but he doesn't exist in my family records. My father didn't volunteer information -- he responded only to questions, and with few exceptions he didn't elaborate on anything. My father graduated from law school in 1937, the year William Henley died. If he met his great uncle, or any of his cousins from William Henley's family line, he didn't comment. His only "war stories" were about his own father in the Great War, and about a grand uncle on his father's side who was supposed to have fought in the Civil War.

Sorry for the rambling -- information for what it's worth.

Pronunciation of "Baldwin"

After all my blather, Ross Murray -- a straight-up 3rd cousin of mine in the line of John R. Baldwin, James Alfred Baldwin, Walter Eldon Baldwin, and B.J. Baldwin Rudder -- sealed the deal with the observation that his grandfather pronounced his name "Walder Rawlee Balden" (Facebook, Baldwin Genealogy, 22 November 2018).

As with most names, Baldwin has a variety of spellings. And since no spelling of any word pronounces itself, the "Baldwin" spelling is subject to different pronunciations. Ross's mother, too, remarked that "I still [hear] people say Bald-en and Bald-un instead of Bald-win."

Top  


John R. Baldwin in the "War of the Rebellion"

Did John R. Baldwin participate, in any manner militarily, in the "War of the Rebellion" as the "War Between the States" and the "Civil War" was called in his time? He appears to be the "John R. Balden" enumerated as a "Class 1" enrollee in the 8th Congressional District of Kentucky, while living in Owsley County in July-August 1863. By then, Kentucky -- which had always voted to remain in the Union but seems to have waxed neutral for a while -- had clearly declared itself on the side of the Union.

If the "John R. Balden" in the 1863 "Class 1" list is John R. Baldwin of the Baldwin-Howard family, how do we account for "Balden"? If he wrote his name "Baldwin" on the original record, then "Balden" would be a copyists error -- i.e., an error made by a clerk when copying the name from the original record to the list. But this would mean that the copyist read "wi" and wrote "e" -- an unlikely mistake. What, though, if the original record was made by a clerk writing what he heard John R. Baldwin orally report? If Baldwin pronounced his name "Balden", then the clerk might have written "Balden" -- without suspecting that the speaker himself would have written "Baldwin". But given the commonality of the name "Baldwin", you would think that an alert clerk would confirm the spelling.

Assuming that "John R. Balden / Baldwin" was later called to serve in Kentucky, through the agency of the 1863 enumeration, he would have served in a Union uniform. If for any reason he wanted to join a Confederate unit, he could found a Confederate recruiter operating in Kentucky, or crossed the border to a Confederate state -- to the east into Virginia, where he had come from -- or gone to Tennessee, even closer to the south. But as of this writing (November 2020), I have not seen any evidence that he did so -- or any evidence that he wore a Union uniform either.

This does not mean that John R. Baldwin did not militarily participate in the Civil War on one side or the other. It means only that no military or other contemporary records have turned up to support the contentions or insinuations in various "war stories" that he participated militarily. See Baldwin-Howard lore (below) for examples of such stories.

It is even possible that John R. Baldwin moved to Kentucky, in the earlier months of 1863, before his July-August enrollment in the 8th District register, by a desire to get away from the "politics" of of his home state, Virginia, where his younger brother, Thomas N. Baldwin, had enlisted on 22 May 1861, barely a month after the war started.

Even today, the Civil War war is being fought in the hearts and minds of descendants of some of its survivors. And even today, historians and teachers are likely to be caught in the crossfire of personal and public opinon about the causes and purposes of the war -- and controversial issues like how, or even whether, to memorialize Confederate heroes or fly the Confederate flag (see Kentucky in the Civil War (below).

Top  


Civil War records

Civil War records are mostly hit and miss. Many records -- perhaps most -- simply didn't didn't survive. And surviving records of the kind that are being scanned for access through family history websites, rarely provide insight into the nature of a soldier's duties, or even his presence, at a given place and time, such as a battle.

The website of the National Archieves and Records Administration (NARA) of the United States summarizes Union and Confederate records as follows (Civil War Records: Basic Research Sources (NARA).

Union Records

For Union army soldiers, there are three major records in the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) that provide information on military service: (1) compiled military service record (CMSR); (2) pension application file; and (3) records reproduced in microfilm publication M594, Compiled Records Showing Service of Military Units in Volunteer Union Organizations (225 rolls).

Confederate Records

For Confederate army soldiers, there are two major records in NARA that provide information on military service: (1) compiled military service record (CMSR) and (2) records reproduced in microfilm publication M861, Compiled Records Showing Service of Military Units in Confederate Organizations (74 rolls). Records relating to Confederate soldiers are typically less complete than those relating to Union soldiers because many Confederate records did not survive the war.

NARA does not have pension files for Confederate soldiers. Pensions were granted to Confederate veterans and their widows and minor children by the States of Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia; these records are in the state archives or equivalent agency.

Ancestry and Fold3 records

A couple of the records shown to the right are from Ancestry.com. Most, though, are from Ancestry's Fold3 subsidary.

Confederate records of the kind shown to the right are of the "compiled service record" type, consisting of a simple paper cover that, when folded, holds several chits or cards on which information has been abstracted from a soldier's original muster, hospital, deserter, and prisoner of war rolls and other records. In other words, the information in this records has been manually copied from other, usually more detailed records.

Such "compiled records" are akin to a database which merely "indexes" the most salient information of interest to the people compiling the record, database, or index. All the records cited here include at least the following three items.

  1. A cover showing the soldier's name, company, regiment or battation, and state or other unit affiliation, and the numbers of the cards from which information on the chits within the cover was abstracted.
  2. "Company Muster Roll chits on which the abstracter has written the (a) the first letter of the soldier's family name, the company, and the regiment and state affilation, (b) the soldier's name, rank, and unit, (c) the date, place, agency, and term of enlistment, (d) the period (typically 2 months, sometimes more) covered by the chit, (e) when the soldier was last paid, (f) whether he was present or absent for the muster, and (g) other particulars, often nothing, but at times the sort of duties for which the soldier was detailed, or whether the soldier was sick or possibly away without leave or had deserted.
  3. The conditions and date when the soldier was paroled from detention as a captured or surrendered prisoner of war.

While no records were found for John R. Baldwin of the Baldwin-Howard family, I have chosen to digest the contents of 3 records -- those of 2 other Virginian "John R. Baldwins" -- "Halltown John R. Baldwin" and "Richmond John R. Baldwin, so-called according to the place where they enlisted -- and John R. Baldwin's younger brother Thomas N. Baldwin, who enlisted from Rose Hill in Lee County, the county in which John R. Baldwin could easily have enlisted in the Confederate Army had he wanted to.

Other John R. Baldwins (Confederacy)

Halltown John R. Baldwin
Richmond John R. Baldwin

John R. Baldwin's youngest brother (Confederacy)

Thomas N. Baldwin (1843-1924)

John R. Baldwin's brother-in-law and nephew (Union)
Father and son witnessed the War of the Rebellion
from Tennessee and Kentucky

James Alvin Thomas (1827-1861)
Henry Clay Thomas (c1845-1904)

Top  


Halltown John R. Baldwin

The John R. Baldwin most commonly confused for the Baldwin-Howard family John R. Baldwin enlisted in Halltown, Virginia a week after the outbreak of the Civil War.

A "Company Muster Roll" shows that John R. Baldwin Enlisted in Halltown, Virginia, on 18 April 1861 by Captain Buttler for a period of 12 months -- which ended up 4-1/2 years.

Confederate.
B / 2 / Va.
Jno. [John] R, Baldwin
Pvt / Captain Vincent Moore Butler's Co.
      (Hamtramct Guards),
      2nd Regiment Virginia Infantry.*
Age 23 years.

Appears on
Company Muster Roll
from the organization named above,
from Jefferson County,
for Apr. 18 to June 30, 1861.
    Dated June 30, 1861
Occupation Laborer

========================================
Enrolled for active service:
When     Apr. 18, 1861
Where    Halltown [Virginia] Note
By whom  Capt. Butler

========================================
Mustered into service:
When     May 11, 186[1]
Where    Harpers Ferry [Virginia] Note 1
By whom  Capt. Botts Note 2

========================================
No. of miles to place of muster-in 10 Note 3
* This company was known at various times as
Captain Butler's Company, Captain Moler's Company
and Company B, 2d Regiment Virginia Infantry.

Notes

  1. Halltown and Harpers Ferry were in Jefferson County, then in Virginia, today in West Virginia, which did not exist at the time the Civil War began. The counties of West Virginia did not separate from Virginia and join the Union as its 35th state until 20 June 1863, over 2 years after Richmond John R. Baldwin enlisted. The birth of West Virginia was in effect a return to the Union fold through a secession within a secession.
  2. I have not been able to identify Capt. Botts. Another Botts -- John Minor Botts (1802-1869) -- was a prominent Richmond Unionist who opposed Virginia's secession but remained in Richmond -- the capital of the Commonwealth and, during the war, the Confederacy States of America -- and often ran afoul of Confederacy officials.
  3. The distance between Halltown and Harpers Ferry was 10 miles. This distance could have been walked in 3 to 4 hours.

Teamster

Halltown John R. Baldwin's pay chit for Sept-Oct 1861 notes that he was detailed as a "teamster" on 9 Oct 1862 by order of Col. Allen. As such he would have been invovled with driving wagons pulled by teams of horses. These

Forage Master

Company Muster Roll chits for Halltown John R. Baldwin's 2nd year of service show that, from 30 June 1862 to 30 June 1863, he was detailed as a "Forage Master" then "Forage Master for Brigade".

Forage master
A forage master was responsible for finding and transporting food and other supplies when a unit had no supply line and had to subside off the locality. Halltown John R. Baldwin's Company Muster Chits show that he is often absent on pay day, for the reason that he was detailed for duties that took him away from the B Company's camp. Some Company Muster Roll chits show that he was temporarily transferred to another company in order to be paid.

Foraging
How a foragering detail obtained needed provisions for its unit depended on the locality and how desperate the unit needed the provisions. Foraging activitities included everything from gathering nuts and berries from the countryside and harvesting vegetables and fruits from abandoned fields or orchards, to soliticing or commandeering butter, eggs, meat, livestock, grains, hay, and other necessities from local farmers. When obtaining provisions from local people, foragers were supposed to pay in cash or issue vouchers for later payment. But especially when operating in areas where civilians were hostile or of mixed loyalties, some foraging parties simply took what they wanted, at times resorting to forays and raids tha stripped the countryside and left local people to fend for themselves.

Quarter Master Sergeant

Company Muster Roll chits for Halltown John R. Baldwin's 3rd year of service show that, from July 1863 to 30 April 1864, he was detailed as "Quarter Master Sergt" under "Maj. Mercer, Q.M. [Quarter Master]" -- although his chit rank was "Pvt."

Quarter master sergeant
A quarter master sergeant was a non-commissioned officer responsible for providing quarters, food, and equipment and other supplies in a military unit.

Surrender and parole

A chit (see image to right) states that Halltown John R. Baldwin's name

Appears on a list Confederate soldiers "belonging to the Army of Northern Virginia, who have been this day surrendered by General Robert E. Lee, C.S.A. [Confederate States of America], commanding, said Army, to Lieut. Genl. U.S. Grant, commanding Armies of the United States" was "Done [overstruck] Paroled [handwritten] at Appomattox Court House, Virginia, April 9, 1865.

On the surface of the revision by hand of "Done" to "Paroled", Halltown John R. Baldwin was both surrendered and paroled on or shortly after the day of the surrender -- perhaps as in this imaginary scene.

Alright, men, listen up! The war's over. You're free to go home -- after you do three things. One, park your artillery, stack your arms, and drop your ammo at the designated places. Two, give your name, unit, and rank to the officer in charge of compiling a final roll of officers and men. And three, pick up a Paroled Prisoner Pass, which you will need to prove that you are not a deserter, and to obtain food and transportation on your way home.

Terms of surrender

The terms of surrender, as written by Grant and accepted by Lee, read as follows, according to one transcription.

APPOMATTOX COURT-HOUSE, VA.
April 9, 1865

General R. E. LEE:

In accordance with the substance of my letter to you of the 8th instant, I propose to receive the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia on the following terms, to wit: Rolls of all the officers and men to be made in duplicate, one copy to be given to an officer to be designated by me, the other to be retained by such officer or officers as you may designate. The officers to give their individual paroles not to take up arms against the Government of the United States until properly exchanged; and each company or regimental commander sign a like parole for the men of their commands. The arms, artillery, and public property to be parked and stacked, and turned over to the officers appointed by me to receive them. This will not embrace the side-arms of the officers, nor their private horses or baggage. This done, each officer and man will be allowed to return to his home, not to be disturbed by U. S. authority so long as they observe their paroles and the laws in force where they may reside.

U.S. GRANT,
Lieutenant-General.

Lee asked, and Grant agreed, that not only officiers but all men in surrendered Army of Northern Virginia artillery and cavalry units, who owned their horses, be allowed to keep them.

Paroled Prisoner's Pass

It is clear from other documents that the paroling of Confederate soldiers who became prisoners of war as a result of the surrender at Appomattox took time, as POWs were processed in the sort of systematic manner that one would expect of legalist and bureaucratic entities like the United States and the Confederate States of America. Paroled POWs were issued a "Paroled Prisoner's Pass" which permitted them to travel and remain home with being disturbed (see image of such a pass on the right).

Such passes were also intended to help a parolled soldier obtain food and transportation on the way home. To what extent this was actually possible probably depended on the route home.

Top  


Richmond John R. Baldwin

Another John R. Baldwin enlisted in Richmond, Virginia, about 6 weeks after the start of the Civil War and participated in the war until his release from Union Army captivity in Farmville, Virginia unit at the end of the war.

Baldwin, John R.
Co. D, 25 Battalion
Virginia Infantry.
(Richmond Battalion Virginia Infantry.)
(City Battalion Virginia Infantry.)

(Confederate.)
B / 25 Battalion / Va.

========================================
Jno. R. Baldwin
Pvt., Co. D, 25th Batt'n Virginia Inf.
Appears on
Company Muster Roll
of the organization named above,
for July 26 to Oct. 31, 1862.
dated Oct. 31, 1862.

========================================
Enlisted:
When     Aug. 26, 186[1]
Where    Richmond [Virginia] Note
By whom  Capt. Potts
Period   6 mo

Note

  1. Richmond, the capital of the Commonwealth of Virginia, became the capital of the Confederate States of America (CSA) after 17 April 1861, when the state legislature, 5 days after Confederate forces attacked Ft. Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina, voted to secede from the United States and join the newly formed Confederacy.

Hospitalization

Records show that, on 16 July 1863, John R. (Jno. R., J.R.) Baldwin was admitted to C.S.A. [Confederate States of America] General Hospital in Farmsville, Virginia, with a complaint of "Convalescent". He was admitted on 17 July 1863, the following day, with a complaint of "Debilitas" [weakness; lameness, debility, infirmity].

Farmville, which today straddles the boundaries of Prince Edward and Cumberland counties in Virginia, is the seat of Prince Edward. Located in the center of Virginia, it fell into Union hands during the final battles of the Civil War, which culminated in the surrender of General Robert E. Lee (1807-1870) on 9 April 1865, at Appomattox Court House, a village near the present town of Appomattox, about 27 miles from Farmville.

Desertion

One Company Muster Roll chit states he was "Absent sick". Another states he was "Absent without leave".

A C.S.A General Hospital, Farmsville, Virginia chit states he deserted on 30 July 1863.

Paroled as Prisoner of War

Presumably Richmond John R. Baldwin returned to his unit, or was found and brought back, for his name and rank, and B Company, 25th Battalion, Virginia affiliation, appear on a "List of Confederate Prisoners of War paroled by T. L. Barker, Lieut. Col. 36 Mass. Vols., P.M., at Farmville, Va., between April 11 and April 21, 1865, by order of Brig. Gen'l Masey, Provost Marshal, Army of the Polomac."

Note the range of dates between which POWs were paroled at Farmville -- beginning 2 days after Lee's surrender to Grant at Appomattox and taking 11 days.

See notes on Terms of surrender and Paroled Prisoner's Pass for details and an image of such a pass (above).

Top  


Thomas N. Baldwin

Thomas N. Baldwin was enumerated with the household of his older brother John R. Baldwin in the 1860 census for the Jonesville Postoffice area of the Western District of Lee County.

The town of Jonesville is today the seat of Lee County. The town is about 8 miles, a 10-minute drive by car today, west of Pennington Gap on U.S. Route 58 toward Rose Hill, another 16 miles or 20 minutes further west. 1859 and 1861 birth and Christening records, which bracket the 1860 census, show John and Margaret in Poor Valley, on the outskirts of present-day Pennington Gap as one heads north on U.S. Route 421 toward Harlan, Kentucky.

Thomas enlisted in Rose Hill, Lee County, Virginia on 22 May 1861. He served until paroled at Appomattox Court House by the Union Army shortly after General Robert E. Lee formally surrendered there to General U.S. Grant on 9 April 1865, which ended the War of the Rebellion.

Baldwin, Thomas N.
Co. E / Co. K, 37 Virginia Inf'y.
(Confederate)
Private / Corporal

========================================
(Confederate)
B / 37 / Va.

========================================
Thomas N. Baldwin
Pvt., Co. E, 37 Reg't Virginia Inf.
Appears on 
Company Muster Roll
of the organization named above,
for July & August, 1861,
dated Aug. 31.

========================================
Enlisted:
When     May 22, 186[1]
Where    Rose Hill [Virginia] Note
By whom  Capt. Gibson
Period   12 mo

========================================
The 37th Regiment Virginia Infantry was accepted
into the service of the Confederate States
July 1, 1861, and reorganized April 22, 1862.
Companies G and I were consolidated under
Captain Bussey after the October 31, 1862,
muster, but each company appears to have been
mustered separately. Most of the members of
the regiment were captured in May, 1864,
and the remnants of all the companies
were later assigned to Companies H and K.

Note

  1. Rose Hill, in Lee County, Virginia, is about 25 miles west and a bit to the south of Pennington Gap. Whereas the road north and west out of Pennington Gap to Harlan, Kentucky, crossed the divide into Kentucky, the road to Rose Hill remained in Virginia as it headed toward the tristate border of Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee. Pennington Gap was near Poor Valley, which is named on the 1859 and 1861 birth and Christening records for two of John R. and Margaret Baldwin's children who did not survive. The Baldwin-Howard household, with 5 children and John R. Baldwin's younger brother Thomas N. Baldwin, was enumerated in the 1860 census for Jonesville Post Office, in present-day Jonesville, a town situated about one-third of the way toward Rose Hill if leaving from Pennington Gap.

Descrepancies in date and place of enlistment

8 Company Muster Roll chits -- representing 3 series of chits, each series in a different hand -- characterize the place and date of Thomas N. Baldwin's enlistment in three ways.

1st series
3 chits from Jul-Aug 1861 to Mar-Apr 1862
Thomas N. / Thomas N. / Thomas N. Baldwin
Enlisted in Rose Hill / Rose Hill / Rose Hill
on May 22, 1861

2nd series
4 chits from May-Jun 1862 to Nov-Dec 1862
Thos N. / T.N. / T.N. / T.N. Baldwin
enlisted in Lee Cty / Lee Co Va / Lee Co Va / Lee Co
on May 27 / May 27 / May 22 / May 21, 1861

3rd series
2 chits from Apr 30 to Aug 31 1864
and Apr 30 [sic] to Oct 31 1864
T.N. Baldwin
enlisted in Walnut Hill, Va
on April 10, 1861

The date variations in the 2nd series -- 27, 27, 22, 21 -- are probably transcriptions errors. They compare with "May 22" in the 1st series, whereas the 3rd series has "April 10" -- an entirely different date.

The undated first Company Muster Roll chit in the 3nd series -- for Apr 30 to Oct 31 1864 -- describes "T.N. Baldwin" as a "Corpl" of "K" rather than "B" Company of the 37th Regiment Virginia Infantry. This series states that Baldwin was enlisted by Capt. Gibson in "Walnut Hill Va." on "Apr 10, 1861". Remarks state "Transferred from Co. B to Co. E by order Brig. Gen Terry."

"Walnut Hill"
I first thought "Walnut Hill" was a town in Logan County in present-day West Virginia. At the start of the Civil War, the county and the town were part of Virginia, which had seceded from the Union. During the war, several counties in northwest Virginia voted to split off from Virginia and rejoin the Union as West Virginia, which was admitted as the 35th state on 20 June 1863 -- 2 years after Thomas N. Baldwin enlisted.

It didn't make sense that a clerk would write "Walnut Hill" for "Rose Town" -- much less that T.N. Baldwin would mistakenly say he came from a town in another county of (West) Virginia. Then later, on a 1863 map of Kentucky, I spotted "Walnut Hill" west of Jonesville and just east of Cumberland Gap. Walnut Hill appears to be in the vicinity of presentday Wheeler, perhaps just west of Wheeler in what was known as Gibson Station. These and other tiny communities were part of what was later called the Rose Hill Magisterial District. And one of T.N. Baldwin's daughters, Elizabeth Ann Baldwin (1869-1951), would marry a man from this part of Lee County then live, die, and be buried there (see below).

"April 10"
Assuming that "Walnut Hill" is a revision of "Rose Hill", then "April 10" may be a revision of "April 22". T.N. Baldwin may have initiated his enlistment on "April 10" in "Walnut Hill" but mustered in on "April 22" in "Rose Hill" a few miles away. Another possibility is that the clerk who wrote the chits for "T.N. Baldwin" copied "Walnut Hill" and "April 10" from another soldier's record.

Reenlistment bounty

A "Bounty Pay and Receipt Roll" chit dated Camp Mason, Feb. 18, 1862, shows that Thomas N. Baldwin, of Co. E, 37 Reg't Va. Infantry, recieved a bounty of $50-00/100 authorized for men who reenlisted in the unit. This may have been the Fort Mason near Graham, the county seat of Alamance County in North Carolina.

Hospital admission

Thos. N. Baldwin is admitted to Lovington Hospital, Winchester, Virginia, on Aug. 8, 1862, for "Diabetes".

Pay records

Thomas R. Baldwins records His records also include a very detailed pay statement which shows that, on 6 June 1864, at Richmond, Virginia, T.N. Baldwin, Corpl Co E 37 Regt Va, was paid $52 by Major John Ambler for the period 1 January to 30 April 1864, computed at the rate of $13 per month.

Pvt, 2 Corpl, Corpl

Company Muster Roll chits from Jul-Aug 1861 through Mar-Apr 1862 show Thomas N. or Thos. N. Baldwin as a Private. However, the Mar-Apr 1862 chit, while reporting that his "Present or absent" status is "Not stated", remarks that he was "Elected Corpl. April 23, 1862". Chits from May-Jun 1862 through Nov-Dec 1862 show his rank as "2 Corpl" or "2 Corp", but chits for Apr 30 to Aug 31, and for Apr 30 [sic] to Oct 31 1864 -- 2 years later -- show him as a "Corp".

Are "2 Corpl" and "Corpl" different ranks?
On the surface, Thomas N. appears to have been promoted from "2 Corpl" to "Corpl" -- but perhaps there was only a change in the notation for "corporal" -- his muster-out rank. "2 Corpl" may have signified a "second class corporal" as an intermediate rank between "private" and "corporal" -- corresponding to a "private second class" or "private first class" today.

Surrender and parole

An undated record states that Thomas N. Baldwin, Corpl, Co. E., 37 Virginia Regiment, Residence Lee Co. Va., appeared on a list of Confederate soldiers paroled following the surrender of their units by Confederate General Robert E. Lee to Union General Ulysses S. Grant at the end of the war.

Appears on a List of Prisoners of War in the Army of Northern Virginia,
who have been this day surrendered by General Robert E. Lee, C.S.A. [Confederate States of America],
commanding said Army, to Lieut. Genl. U.S. Grant, commanding Armies of the United States

Done [overstruck] Paroled [handwritten] at Appomattox Court House, Virginia, April 9, 1865.

On the surface of the revision by hand of "Done" to "Paroled", Thomas N. Baldwin was both surrendered and paroled on the day of surrender at Appomattox Court House. However, processing the POWs and issuing each a "Paroled Prisoner's Pass" took time. See notes on Terms of surrender and Paroled Prisoner's Pass for details and an image of such a pass (above).

See Thomas N. Baldwin in Confederate service (below) for Thomas N. Baldwin's Civil War time line and a newspaper "war story" about his life.

Top  


James Alvin and Henry Clay Thomas

A father and son on the home front
and the saga of a war-broken family

The Baldwin-Seale household was devasted by deaths in the mid 1850s. Five years later, the civil war was ravaging the lives of Baldwin-Seale descendants.

The family of the oldest sibling, Mary Ann (Baldwin) Thomas, seems to have had the most difficult time, after her husband, James Alvin Thomas, on leave from military duty in 1862, died of measles while visiting her at the home of her sister, Harriet K. (Baldwin) Mink, in Kentucky. For reasons we will never know, Mary Ann -- the mother of

James Alvin Thomas, as the husband of Mary A. (Baldwin) Thomas, was the son in law of John M. Baldwin and the brother-in-law of John R. Baldwin.

Guardian of 5 minor children of James Alvin Thomas, deceased, seeks relief under 6 June 1866 Pension Act on grounds that they had been abandoned by their mother, who was unsuitable by reason of immoral conduct in 17 March 1873 deposition by Jesse Rogers, guardian, to Chancery Court of Claiborne County, Tennessee.

Some family trees show Henry Clay Thomas to have been born on 7 October 1848 in Powell Valley in Lee County, Virginia, and to have died on 2 January 1904 in Georgetown in Scott County, Kentucky. "Powell Valley" is an attempt to color "District 31" as the 1850 census called the area in Lee County in which it listed the "James A. Thomas" household immediately after listing the household of "John M. Baldwin", who was James's father-in-law. Mary A. Thomas was John M. and Elizabeth Baldwin's oldest of 9 known children and the 1st of , which enumerated the sort of bureaucratic nomenclature one finds on contemporary censuses, which label the area in which the Thomases lived on

The following long statement is posted on Henry's Find a Grave memorial, presumably by Russell Thompson, it's creator.

Civil War Veteran, Union. Enlisted at age 14 (lied about his age) in Co. E. 2nd East Tennessee Infantry on Feb. 10, 1862, at Cumberland Ford, and was honorably discharged September 17, 1862 after receiving a gunshot wound in left thigh. Re-enlisted in Co. A., 10th Illinois Vol. Infantry at Nashville, Tennessee on January 2, 1863, and was honorably discharged July 4, 1865 at Louisville, Kentucky. Husband of Martha Jane Brown. Father of 12 children. I have four sources for Henry's birth date:

October 7, 1854, Powell Valley, Lee Co., Virginia, USA. Source: James Alvin Thomas, NARA Form 85D, Full Pension File-Civil War, WC178.061.

1848, Powell Valley, Lee Co., Virginia. Source: Deposition Of Henry Thomas, Deposition A, Pg. 7, No. 649009, Feb. 7, 1889, National Archives. Alternate birth date October 1846.

1846, Precinct 2, Powell, Kentucky. Source: Marriage Records, 1865-1868, Marriage Book E, Pg. 182 & 183, London, Laurel Co., KY, Clerk of the County Court, LDS Family History Library, Film # 0965810.

October 3, 1845. Source: James Alvin Thomas, NARA Form 85D, Full Pension File-Civil War, WC178.061, Jesse Rogers, Guardian, Sworn Declaration, March 17, 1873.

I think the most logical birth date for Henry was 1848 as he would have been 14 if he enlisted in 1862. The date on his stone, 1837, was an guesstimate I made before I ordered his headstone, and before I had access to Henry's and Matha's pension files.

Russell Thompson also created the Find a Grave memorial for Henry C. Thomas's wife Martha J. Thomas. The memorial states that she was "Buried in an unmarked grave until late 2014. Headstone purchased by her great grandson Russell G. Thompson" (viewed 24 February 2020).

Henry Clay Thomas, as a son of Mary Ann (Baldwin) Thomas, was a 1st cousin of my paternal maternal paternal great-grandfather Newton Bascum Baldwin, a son of Mary Ann's 1st younger brother John R. Baldwin. According, Russell Gordon Thompson and I are straight up 4th cousins with common Baldwin-Seale great-great-great-great grandparents John M. and Elizabeth Baldwin.

Thompson's tombstone "guesstimate" date of birth is "JAN 1   1837" but he (or somesome) gives "7 Oct 1854". The "1854" could be a typo for "1843", the year stated on the 1900 census, which shows "Oct 1843".

Censuses show Thomas's ages as follows (all enumerated as of 1 June).

 5, 1850 census for District 31 of Lee Co, Va
15, 1860, First Sub-Division, Claiborne Co, Tn
25, 1870, Raccoon Post Office, Raccoon Voting Precinct, Laurel Co, Ky
34, 1880 (1 Jun), Voting Precinct No. 2, Powell Co, Ky
56, 1900, born Oct 1843, Georgetown Precinct, Georgetown, Scott Co, Ky

10 Sep 1862   Henry Clay Thomas enlisted in Company C, Kentucky 2nd Cavalry Regiment, in Lexington, Kentucky, at the rank of private.

The 1870 census for the Raccoon Post Office area of Raccoon Voting Princinct in Laurel County, Kentucky, shows "Henry Thomas" (25) with "Martha J." [no age recorded], "Lillia B." (2), "Rosa L." (5/12), and "Marimon [tentative] E." (21). Lillia and Rosa appear to be their daughters. Marimon E.'s identity is unclear. The 1870 census says she was born in Kentucky, unlike Henry, who was born in Virginia. Henry's younger sister -- "Elizbeth" (3) on the 1850 census and "Elizabeth" (12) on the 1860 census -- was also born in Lee County, Virginia. If born in 6 August 1849 as some family trees claim, however, she would have been 9/12 and 10 on the 1850 and 1860 censuses, and should have been 20 on the 1870 census. In any event, it is not impossible that "Mariomon E." is Henry Clay's sister.

Henry Clay and Elizabeth lost their father to measles in 1862, during the Civil War, and their mother, Mary Ann (Baldwin) Thomas remarried in 1867. Mary Ann appears to have left her Thomas children under circumstances in which the older children fended for themselves, but the younger children became wards of a guardian -- who testified to the circumstances in a disposition dated in 1873 (see image of transcription to right).

The 1900 census for "Georgetown Precinct" in "Georgetown town" in Scott County, Kentucky, shows the household of "Henry C. Thomas" (56), born "Oct 1843", with his wife "Martha J." (52), May 1848, and 8 children from "Jno. A. Thomas" (28), Dec 1871, to "Susie" (7), Feb 1893. Thomas and Martha have been married 32 years and all 12 of her children are still living. He was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents, she in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents, and all enumerated children were born in Kentucky. Henry was a "Pensioner" and owned his own home free of mortgage. John A. is a "Soldier, Co. D., U.S. Inf." Susie is "at school". Only Martha is unable to read and write English.

The 1910 census for Precint 12, part of Muncie City in Delaware County, Indiana, shows "Martha J. Thomas" (61), as a widowed head of household, residing with only her daughter "Susan A." (17). 10 of Martha's 12 children are still living. Martha has her "own income". Susan is a "machine operator" in a "Tin shop". Martha is unable to either read or write. She is renting the home in which she resides.

Martha J. Thomas, born Martha Jane Brown on 28 May 1848, in Kentucky, died on 15 September 1912 in the village of Shelbyville in the township of Adisin, Shelby County, Indiana, of "Septic poisoning result of slight injury of hand". She is buried in Forest Hill Cemetery in Shelby County.

Top  


William and Elihu Moles

Different fates of brothers who married Baldwin and Grubb widows

Marriages between children of neighboring families were common. My paternal maternal grandparents, Newton Bascum Baldwin (1862-1919) and Martha Ellen Steele (1863-1943) were fence neighbors. Remarriages with sibling of a deceased spouse were also fairly common. Newton Bascum Baldwin's father, John R. Baldwin (1828-1909), married Margaret Anne Howard (1835-1912), the younger sister of his 1st wife, Rebecca Ann Howard (1828-1855), when Rebecca died. As the children of his aunt, Bascum's older half-siblings were also his half-cousins, and their step-mother was also their aunt.

Siblings from one family marrying siblings from another family were unusual but not rare. Newton Bascum Baldwin's younger brothers -- Robert Ewing Baldwin (1858-1942) and George Finley Baldwin (1873-1946) -- married sisters -- Eliza Jane King (1873-1938) and Emeline King (1875–1961). Their paternal great uncle and great aunt -- William Baldwin (c1830-c1854) and Sarah Jane Baldwin (1833-1888) -- married fence neighbors Harriet Grubb (1836-1907) and Lorenzo D. Grubb (1833-1893).

Of interest here are the remarriages in the late 1850s of Nancy Ann (Markham) Grubb (c1828-1880/1900) and her step-daughter Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin -- both of whom were left widows in the early 1850s -- to younger, never married brothers -- William Hamilton Moles (1834-1864) and Elihu Harden Moles (c1838-1890) -- who during the Civil War met very different fates on opposite sides.

William H. Moles (1834-1864) enlisted in Company I, Virginia 27th Cavalry Battalion, a volunteer component of the Army of the Confederate States of America. He was a private and died of measles at a Union prisoner of war camp.

Elihu H. Moles (1837-1890) enlisted in C Company, 19th Kentucky Infantry Regiment, a volunteer component of the Army of the United States of America. He was a 2nd lieutenant when discharged during the war as a casualty.

Top  


Private William H. Moles

Company I, Virginia 27th Cavalry Battalion
Captured at Jonesville, died at Rock Island

Several original manuscript records establish the timeline of William H. Moles's life and death as private in Company I, 27th Virginia Cavalry, a battalion or regiment in the Confederate Army. The following transcriptions of information in the manuscript records are mine.

Record Book of /
National Cemetery, at Rock Island, Illinois
Moles, Wm. H. Pri I 27 Va Feby 5 1864 [Sec A] 378

Record Book of Interments in Confederate /
National Cemetery, at Rock Island Arsenal
Moles, William Pvt I 27 Va Feby 5 1864 378

Record of Interments in Confederate Cemetery 1864
(59) 58 Wm Moles [Pri] I 27th Va. Feby 5 [1864] Variola 378

Roll of Prisoners of War at Military Prison, Louisville, Ky [manuscript image]
Moles William H. Private 27 Va Cavy I
Where captured Jonesville Va
When captured Dec [sic] 9 63
Date discharged Jany 17 64
Where sent Rock Island

Record of Prisoners of War Who Have Died at Rock Island Barracks, Illinois
Barrack No. 58 Moles William H. Pri 27 Va I
Where captured Jonesville Va
When captured 1863 Oct 9
When joined station 63 May 20
Died 1864 Feby 5 Variola
Grave 378 South of Prison Barracks

An index card, created sometime after 1 October 1961, reflects the following information from one of the manuscript records (my transcription).

U.S. National Cemetery Interment Control Form
DA Form 2122 [1 Oct 1961] [typescript image]
MOLES, Wm. H. Pvt Rock Island Conf Cem / Rock Island, Ill
Co I 27 Battn. Va. Cav. Death Mo 2 Day 5 Year 1864 Grave 378

A transcript (not a scan) of a Virginia Death and Burial Index record shows the following information, which presumably was culled from contemporary records.

William H. Moles
Born abt 1835 Virginia
Died 15 Feb 1864 Rock Island, Illinois
Age at death 29
Farmer, Married, Male
Father William Moles
Mother Lizzie Moles
Spouse Nancy Moles

William Hamilton Moles is buried as "Wm. H. Moles" with an undated tombstone inscribed "378 / WM. H. MOLES CO I / 27 BATTN VA CAV / U.S.A." in Rock Island Confederate Cemetery in Rock Island, Rock Island County, Illinois. He died on 2 February 1864.

A scans of a contemporary grave register shows him listed as "Wm. Moles" in Barrack "(59) 58". The Rank column is blank. He was in Company "I" of Regiment "27th Va.", died on "Feby 5" of "Variola" [smallpox], and was buried in Grave "378".

A "Record of Prisoners of War who have died at Rock Island Barracks, Illinois" shows him as "Moles William H." in Barrack "58", a "Pvt" in Regiment "27 Va", Company "I", Captured in "Jonesville Va" on "Oct 9" [1863], having Joined Station in "May 20" [1863], Died "Feby 5 / 1864", Cause of Death "Variola", Buried in grave number "378 / South of Prison Barracks".

Yet another prisoner of war record states that he was a "Private", qualifies his regiment as "Cavy" (Cavalry), and says he was captured in Jonesville on "Dec 9 [sic] / [18]63" and discharged in Rock Island on "Jany 19 [18]64". The "Private", "Dec" and discharge date are "ditto" entries.

The 27th Cavalry Battalion, Virginia, was organized with 6 companies, A-F, on 1 September 1862. Companies G, H, and I were added on 27 September 1862, 3 October 1863, and 18 April 1863. A 10th company was added and the unit redesignated the 25th Cavalry Regiment on 8 July 1864.

Birth, marriage, and life of William H. Moles

5 February 1834   William Hamilton Moles was born in Patrick County, Virginia. He is the older brother of Elihu H. Moles (1837-1890).

Nancy Ann Grubb, also known as "Annie" and "Anna", became Archibald Grubb's 2nd wife. She was the daughter of Josiah Markham [sometimes "Marcum"] (1790–1842) and Mary Polly Bales [sometimes "Beals" or "Boles"] (1795–1877), a younger sister of Jane (Bales) Seale (1787-1841), the wife of Fielding Seale (1790-1838) and the mother of John M. Baldwin's wife Elizabeth. Mary was also an older sister of Robert M. Bales (1807-1893), who figured in the administration of the estates of both Archibald Grubb and John M. Baldwin. Nancy Ann Grubb relinquished the administration of Archibald Grubb's estate to Robert M. Bales on 18 October 1852, which puts a "no later than" limit on his Archibald Grubb's death. On 21 March 1853, the Lee County court assigned the guardianship of Nancy Ann's children -- Martha J., William, and Archibald (Junior) -- to Robert M. Bales. See Grubb brothers vs. Robert M. Bales for legal actions taken against Bales in the late 1880s by William and Archibald (Junior) concerning his handling of their father's property and their share of the inheritance.

The 1850 census for Snow Creek District of Stokes County in North Carolina shows "William Moles" (17), the 2nd of 11 children and 2nd of 8 sons of "Wm. [William] J. Moles" (38) and "Elizabeth [(Lewis)] Moles" (37). Elihu H. Moles is enumerated as "Harden Moles" (12), the 4th child and 4th son. Everyone in the family was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents. William H. Moles, possibly alone, returned to Lee County, Virginia, where he married the widowed Nancy Ann (Markham) Grubb on 26 June 1856.

1851-1852   Harriet Grubb, Nancy Ann Grubb's step daughter, marries William Baldwin, a neighbor. William Baldwin is Milton M. Baldwin's son and John R. Baldwin's 1st younger brother.

October 1852   Archibald Grubb dies.

1852-1853   Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin bears William Baldwin's son, William L. Baldwin, called "little William" in his grandfather Milton M. Baldwin's 2 March 1855 last will and testament.

About 1854   William Baldwin dies.

26 May 1856   Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin remarries Elihu Harden Moles (c1838-1890).

Harriet brings William L. Baldwin, her son with William Baldwin, to the marriage. She would have at least 3 more children with Elihu Moles. Little William grew up a Moles and then a Baldwin. He married as a Baldwin, and in 1903-1905 his daughter, Lulu May (Baldwin) Posterwait, with the help of her grandmother Harriet Moles, won an equity case in Lee County Chancery Court, in which she claimed to be the legal heir of 1/6th of her great-grandfather John M. Baldwin's Rose Hill, Lee County farm. See John M. Baldwin's last will and testament (above) for details.

26 June 1856   Nancy Ann (Markham) Grubbs, Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles's step-mother, remarries William Hamilton Moles (1834-1864), Elihu H. Moles younger brother. A step-mother and step-daughter thus become sisters-in-law.

The Moles brothers were sons of William S. and Elizabeth Moles. The Moles family is enumerated in Stokes County, Virginia, in 1850 with 11 children, and in Pulaski County, Kentucky, in 1860 with 9 children -- 2 new children, minus William and Elihu, and Elbert Leander Moles. William and Elihu had married widowed Grubb and Baldwin wives. Elbert, born on 17 November 1839 in Palmer County, Virginia, had died on 19 August 1855 in Martins Creek, Lee County, Virginia. His parents were "Wm. S. Moles" and "Elizabeth Moles".

During his sojourn in Lee County, William S. Moles bought some items from the personal estate of Archibald Grubb in 1852, and sold his Martins Creek property to Jacob Wolfenbarger in 1857. These may mark the dates his family arrived in and left Lee County. Jacob's daughter, Nancy C. Wolfenbarger, married Archibald Grubb's grandson, Archibald Grubb (Junior), who Nancy Ann (Markham) Grubb bore in January 1853, about 3 months after Archibald Grubb's death around October 1852.

During the 1850s, between the 1850 and 1860 censuses, the Moles family was sojourning in the western part of Lee County. One family tree cites a Lee County record which shows that, on 23 October 1857, "William S. Moles and Elizabeth, his wife, Sold for the sum of $1050 to Jacob Wolfenbarger, Sr. 'A certain tract of land lying in Lee County on the waters of Martin's Creek'" (Ancestry.com).

Contact between the Moles, Grubb, and Baldwin families is suggested in records which show that on 9 November 1852, "William S. Moles" purchased a couple of items from the personal estate of Archibald Grubb -- as did both John M. and John R. Baldwin and other Grubb and Baldwin neighbors. See Grubb brothers vs. Robert M. Bales (below) for details.

The 1860 census for the Mt. Veron Post Office area of Rockcastle County in Kentucky shows the houseold of "Wm H. Moles" (26) with "Ann Moles" (31) and 4 children -- "Martha Grubb" (13), "Wm. Grubb" (11), "Arch Grubb" (7), and "Sarah A. Moles" (1). All were born in Virginia except Sarah, who was born in Kentucky. Nancy Ann brought the 3 Grubb children to the marriage. Legal actions taken in the late 1880s by Archibald and William Grubb suggest that Robert M. Bales continued to be their legal guardian.

18 April 1863   William H. Moles enlists in Lee County, Virginia, in Company I or the 27th Virginia Cavalry Battalion.

20 May 1863   William H. Moles joined station, apparently in the vicinity of Lee County, Virinia.

9 October or 9 December 1863   William H. Moles is captured at Jonesville in Lee County, Virginia, according to one manuscript record (date not dittoed). Another manuscript record says 9 December 1863 (date dittoed). October and December are a toss up. Union forces gained control of Cumberland Gap in September and mounted raids in Lee County, including Jonesville, its seat, in October and November 1863, and there were battles in Jonesville in January 1864. William H. Moles was sent to a Union prisoner-of-war camp in Louisville, Kentucky. The distance from Jonesville, Virginia to Louisville, Kentucky, through Cumberland Gap, today, is roughly 240 miles (385 kilometers). By automobile it would take about 4 hours non-stop. On foot it would take 8-12 days (20-30 miles/day) more or less. 100 days elasped between his capture at Jonesville and his 17 January 1864 "discharge" at Lousiville, Kentucky if captured on 9 October 1863 -- 39 days if captured on 9 December.

17 January 1864   William H. Moles is "discharged" from the prisoner-of-war camp in Louisville, Kentucky, and "sent to" a camp in Rock Island, Illinois. The distance from Louisville, Kentucky, to Rock Island, Illinois, today, is roughly 420 miles (670 kilometers). By automobile it would take about 6-1/2 hours non-stop. On foot it would take 14-21 days (20-30 miles/day) more or less. 19 days elasped between his "discharge" at Lousiville Kentucky and his 5 February 1864 death at Rock Island, Illinois. William H. Moles probably took sick enroute.

5 February 1864   William H. Moles died of smallpox while in captivity at a Union prisoner-of-war camp in Rock Island in Illinois.

William H. Moles, bunked in Barrack 58 (one record suggests 59) in the prisoner-of-war facility at Rock Island, Illinois, dies of "Variola" (smallpox). He is buried in grave 378 in Section A "south of prison barracks". The vertical gravestone appears to bear only the grave number, and his name and military unit.

Nancy and children after death of William H. Moles

28 August 1864   John Hamilton Moles was born in Lee County on or about this date, around 7-1/2 months after his father's death. Assuming he is William's son, if his mother carried him for 9 months, then he would have been conceived around November 1863. If, as it appears, William was stationed in Lee County, he would have been able to visit his wife. Conception between late October and early December supports a 9 December rather than 9 October date of captivity. He might even have been captured while visiting his wife.

The 1870 census for Rose Hill Township in Lee County Kentucky shows the household of "Nancy A. Moles" (43) with a personal estate worth $200 and 4 children -- 2 Moles children, "Sarah A. Moles" (12) and "John W. Moles" (6) -- and 2 Grubb children, "William Grubb" (21) and "Archibald Grubb" (17). Nancy is keeping house, her 2 children are at home, and the Grubb boys are working the farm. All were born in Lee County, Virginia, except Sarah, who was born in Rockcastle County, Kentucky. Among those the older household members, all can read, but Nancy and Sarah Moles, and Archibald Grubb, cannot write.

The 1880 census for Rose Hill Township in Lee County shows "Anna Moles" (50), keeping house, with her son "John Moles" (15), the last of at least 4 children she had with William H. Moles before his death on 5 February 1864.

I find no unambiguous records of Nancy Ann (Markham) (Grubb) Moles's existence after this -- hence the provision "aft 1880". Records regarding John H. Moles (1864-1923) show the usual problems with spellings of names and birth and death dates, but clearly establish his descent from William H. and Nancy Ann Moles.

Children after death of Nancy Ann (Markham) (Grubb) Moles

20 January 1887   "John H. Moles", age 22, born in 1865 in Lee County, Virginia, father "W.H. Moles", mother "N. Moles", married "Rachael Gollahan", age 23, born in 1864 in Lee County, Virginia, father "Jas Gollahan", in Lee County, Virginia, on 20 January 1887, according to a transcription (not a scan) of a Virginia marriage record.

The 1900 census for the Bales Forge Voting Precinct of Rose Hill in Lee County shows "John H. Moles" (35), born Aug 1864, with his wife "Rachel" [nee "Rachael A. Gallohan] (35), born Sept 1864, and 2 children. They have been married for 13 years and 2 of her 4 children are still living. All were born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents. He is a farmer on a rented farm. Rachel cannot read or write. The surviving children were their 1st and 2nd born, James Henry Moles (1888-1956) and Florence Mae "Flossie" Moles (1890–1970).

The 1910 census for the Bales Forge Precinct in the Rose Hill District of Lee County shows "John H. Moles" (46) and "Rachel A." (46) with 1 son, "Henry J." (21). They have been married 22 years and 2 of her 4 children are still living. John is a farmer on a general farm he owns free of mortgage. Henry is a farm laborer, presumably working for his father.

The 1920 census for Rose Hill Magisterial District of Lee County shows "John H. Moles" (54) with his wife "Rachel A." (54) farming on a general farm he owns free of mortgage and operates on his own account.

John Hamilton Moles is "John Ham Moles" on his Rose Hill Magisterial District death certificate, which says he was born in Virginia on "August 28th 1864" and died on "April 13th 1923". His father was Virginia-born "William Moles" and his mother was Virginia-born "Annie Marcum". The certificate was filed on 13 April 1923, and burial was slated for 14 April 1923 in "Sloane Graveyard" in Rose Hill. However, his tombstone in "Trent Cemetery" in Rose Hill reads "JOHN H. MOLES / "born / Aug. 15, 1865 / died / Apr. 22, 1923 / Gone but not forgotten". His wife is buried in the same cemetery as "RACHEL MOLES / Sept 16, 1864 / Nov. 15, 1940 / GONE HOME".

If John H. Moles was his father's son, and if his father died on 5 February 1864 as several contemporary records show, then John H. Moles was born in or about August 1864 as the 1900 census and his 1923 death certificate state. However, Union military records show that William H. Moles was in captivity in Louisville, Kentucky, and then at Rock Island, Illinois at the time it would seem that John H. Moles was concevied. See Private William H. Moles (below) for details.

John H. Moles is also "John Ham Moles" and Rachael is "Rachel Golhorn" on the Rose Hill, Lee County death certificate of their son "James Henry Moles" (1888-1956). The cause of death was certified by "Thomas S. Ely, M.D., Coroner" of Jonesville. James Henry Moles (1888-1956) and his wife, Laura Bradford (Brock) Moles (1901-1972), are buried at Bradford-Daniel Family Cemetery in Rose Hill.

Top  


2nd Lieutenant Elihu H. Moles

C Company, 19th Kentucky Infantry Regiment
Discharged during the war

Elihu H. Moles's older brother, William H. Moles (1834-1864), died a Confederate soldier in Union captivity in 1864, a year after Elihu was discharged from a Union Kentucky volunteer regiment as a casualty (see right).

Elihu would live a fairly long life with his wife, Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles, the step-daughter of William's wife, Nancy Ann (Markham) (Grubbs) Moles.

Life and death of Elihu H. Moles

10 May 1837   Elihu H. Moles is born in Virgina a younger brother of William Hamilton Moles (1834-1864).

The 1850 census for Snow Creek District of Stokes County in North Carolina enumerates Elihu H. Moles as "Harden Moles" (12), the 4th child of 11 children and 4th of 8 sons of "Wm. [William] J. Moles" (38) and "Elizabeth [(Lewis)] Moles" (37). His older brother is listed as "William Moles" (17), the 2nd of 11 children and 2nd of 8 sons. Everyone in the family was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents.

The 1860 census for the Stanford P.O. area of Lincoln County in Kentucky enumerates "Elihu H. Moles" (23), a carpenter, with "Harriett" [sic = Harriet] (24) and 2 children -- "Wm. L. Moles" (5), who is actually "William L. Baldwin", the deceased William Baldwin's son and John M. Baldwin's grandson -- and "Edmond Delany" (12). All were born in Virginia. Harriet is unable to read or write.

9 April 1862   Elihu H. Moles enlists in the 19 Kentucky Infantry Regiment, a voluneer component of the Union Army, which was organized on 2 January 1862 at Harrodsburg, Kentucky. He appears to have enlisted at Camp Harwood in Harrodsburg.

19 September 1862   Elihu H. Moles appears to have been discharged about this date as a 2nd lieutenant in C Company after becoming a casualty.

The 19th Kentucky participated in the Battle of the Cumberland Gap in June 1862 in a campaign that was carried out from 28 March to 18 June 1862. The regiment was at Cumberland Ford until June, and occupied Cumberland Gap from 18 June to 16 September 1862, after which it evacuated Cumberland Gap and retreated to Greenupsburg (presentday Greenup in Greenup County, Kentucky).

Elihu's older brother William H. Moles enlisted as a private in Lee County, Virginia, in Company I, Virginia 25th Cavalry Regiment, a Confederate unit, on 18 April 1863 about half a year after his brother was discharged as a casulaty. He was captured by Union forces at Jonesville on 5 October 1863, and he died of smallpox at a Union POW camp in Rock Island, Illinois, on 5 February 1864.

1870 census for Jefferson Townswhip in Owen County in Indiana shows "Elihu Moles" (33) with "Harriett" (34), "William" (15), "John H." (9), and "Mary E." (7). Elihu is preaching, Harriett is keeping house, and William "has no employment". Elihu, Harriett, and William were born in Virginia, John in Kentucky, and Mary in Indiana." Harriet can neither read or write.

The 1880 census for "Buck-Creek Township" in Hancock County, Indian, shows the household of "Elihu H. Moles" (43) with his wife "Harriet" (44), a daughter "Ada I." (9), and a "S Son" [step son] "William L. Baldwin" (25). Elihu is a preacher and Harriet is keeping house, while William, who was single, is a roof painter. All were born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents except Ada, who was born in Indiana.

30 September 1881   William L. Baldwin, William Baldwin's son with Harriet Grubb, was married to Phoebe Isabell Williams in Putnam County, Indiana, by Babtist minister Alexander S. Mayhall, according to their marriage license.

27 January 1885   Lulu May Baldwin was born in Mineral Springs in Barry County, Missouri, according to a delayed certificate of birth, an application for which was signed, subscribed, and sworn to before a notary public on 14 November 1953 by "Lulu May (Baldwin) Murray". The application was supported with an affidavit by F.G. Wilkenson, a friend, dated 25 November 1953, and it was filed on 4 December 1953 in the Division of Health, Jefferson City, Missouri.

20 January 1888   William L. Baldwin dies in Barry County, Missouri.

5 April 1890   Elihu H. Moles died in Indiana. He is buried in Yeoman Cemetery in Yeoman, Carroll county, Indiana. His monument says he was born in Virgina and was "AGED 52Ys. 10Ms. 25Ds" when he died. The inscription at the bottom says he was a "2nd LIEUT Co C 19th REGT / KY VOL INF" (?)

31 July 1890   Harriet Moles filed for benefits as the widow of Elihu H. Moles, from Indiana, where she was then residing (Application 467,591, Certificate 308,228) (see image to right).

1901   Lulu May Baldwin marries Charles Postelwait (b1877) in Pawnee County in Oklahoma Territory.

1903-1905   Lulu May Postelwait files a legal action in Lee County, Virginia, to recover equity in her father's (William L. Baldwin's) share of John M. Baldwin's land. See John M. Baldwin's will (below) for details.

17 July 1907   Harriet Moles died in Muncie in Delaware County, Indiana, of "Acute Gastro-enteritis". She had been a widow of "Rev. E.H. Moles". Her father was Virginia-born "John Grubb" and her mother was "Unknown" according to the death certificate. The informant was "John Moles" -- her son. She was slated for burial in Monticello in White County in Indiana. The death certificate of Archibald Grubb's last son, born shortly after his father's death (nlt November 1852), gives his name as "John Grubbs". Apparently he was also known as "John" -- his father's name, as well as the name of his 2nd son John Grubb (1838-1900).

16 November 1907   Oklahoma Territory becomes the 46th state. The contiguous "sea to shining sea" empire would become complete with the addition of New Mexico and Arizona on on respectively 6 January and 14 February 1912. Alaska and Hawaii joined were admitted to the Union on respectively 3 January and 21 August 1959.

Top  


The War of the Rebellion

The Civil and Pacific Wars

As I write this in 2021, the Civil War is 160 years old, and the Pacific War is 80 years old -- as am I. The "Civil War" was not very civil, except in the manner in which it ended, with a formal, by-the-book surrender and laying down of arms -- the same way the not-so-peaceful Pacific War ended.

The last witness of the Civil War died before I was born, and practically all witnesses of the Pacific War have also died. Collective "memories" of the wars today are essentially reliant on handed-down historical accounts, which greatly vary in point of view, quality, and truthfulness.

Each generation has found reason to revise existing histories, and each newer version raises objections from those who prefer earlier versions. Attempts to alter current "official" or "standard" views of the Civil War and the Pacific War are condemned by defenders of orthodox or "politically correct" views as "revisionist".

Many issues are at stake. For example:

Was the Civil War fought mainly to end slavery or to reunite a divided United States? Does a statue of General Lee in a town square today constitute a defense of slavery, or just a memorialization of a man who led the defense of his homeland?

Did Japan not have a right to try to drive Euroamerican colonial powers out of Asia? Did America provoke Japan into a war it needed to justify both chastising Japan for its encroachments on China, and joining the war in Europe against Japan's Axis allies?

Very little new evidence is coming to light regarding either war. Preserving surviving evidence is becoming increasing expensive. But such documents and other artifacts that survive have become more accessible, even to amateur historians. And professional historians have come up with increasingly critical and creative ways to impute new meanings to the evidence.

But clearly, neither the Civil War nor the Pacific War began spontaneously. Both exploded only when fuels that had accumulated over the years were set off by political and military sparks. And, as wars, they have a lot in common.

  1. Both wars were fundamentally territorial conflicts, never mind the multiple issues that fueled hostilities.
    1. There would not have been a "Civil War" -- a "War of the Rebellion" -- if slave states had not seceded from the Union and formed a rival Confederate States of America. The resolve of the non-slave states to emancipate slaves did not materialize until the 2nd year of the war. And the proclaimed emancipation was binding only on Confederate states or localities therin that failed to quit the war by the end of 1862. In other words, the war did not begin in order to end slavery, but slavery ended as a consequence of political developments during the war.
    2. The Pacific War between primarily Japan and the United States germinated from conflicts over China and other hegemonic interests in Asia and the Pacific. However, the Allied Powers did not resolve to "liberate" Japan's colonial territories, which they had recognized were legal, until the 2nd year of the war, and the demand for unconditional surrender was made only in the 4th and last year of the war when Japan seemed bent on fighting to the finish.
  2. Despite their formal ends, neither war is over. Both continue to be fought in academia and the press, in town halls and on the streets.
    1. The descendants of victor veterans are allowed, even encouraged, to take public pride in the military actions of their ancestors and their patriotic motives.
    2. But the descendants of vanquished veterans are apt to be censured if they publicly memorialize the military feats of their ancestors, or justify their participation.

For a fuller comparison of both wars, see
The Civil and Pacific Wars:
Two continuing conflicts 160 and 80 years later

under "History" on the "Yosha Bunko" website.

What's in a name?

A lot -- when in comes to implications of uonconstitutionality, disloyaty, treason, and even immorality. By the end of 19th century, proud Confederate veterans were tired of the federal government's continuing stigmatization of the Confederacy in its treatment of soldiers who had fought on its side.

What people now most commonly call the "Civil War" was called the "War of the Rebellion" in John R. Baldwin's time. Postbellum acts that created pensions for earlier wars -- such as the Act of 29 January 1887, which established benefits for Mexican War veterans -- disqalified veterans whose disabilities were incurred while "in any manner voluntarily engaged in or aiding and abetting the late rebellion against the authority of the United States" (1887 Mexican War pension act).

John R. Baldwin, in ordinary conversation, may have spoken of the "War of the Rebellion" or the "War Between the States" as a "civil war". But he probably did not use "civil war" in the manner of "Civil War" -- the "proper" appelation today.

Some Confederate veterans regarded the federal government's insistance on characterizing the war as a "rebellion" insulting. At the turn of the 19th-20th centuries, both the United Confederate Veterans (UCV) and the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) moved to replace "War of the Rebellion" with "War Between the States", which gradually became more common (Gaines M. Foster, Ghosts of the Confederacy: Defeat, the Lost Cause, and the Emergence of the New South, 1865-1913, Oxford University Press, 1987). Only later did "Civil War" become the standard "neutral" label for a war that continues to embattle historians in debates over its causes and its purposes, which are not the same.

Kentucky as a "swing state"

Kentucky in many ways symbolizes the divide in various opinions over questions of slavery and secession. It was the birthplace of both Civil War presidents -- Abraham Lincoln of the Union, and Jefferson Davis of the Confederacy.

Kentucky was the site of a number of skirmishes during the early months of the war. The vast majority of the larger battles in the war, however, took place to the east in Virginia, to the south and southeast in Tennessee and North Carolina, and in states further south.

Some non-governmental groups in Kentucky sided with the Confedercy, but the state of Kentucky itself always remained in the Union. Even its short-lived "Resolution of Neutrality" on 18 May 1861 was essentially a vote for the Union cause.

The Great War or World War came half a century after the Civil War. During "the war to end all wars" -- now called World War I -- a number of scholars were thrashing through the archival ruins of the Civil War, trying to answer old and new questions about its causes and purposes. The following article is a 1916 look at the geographical and political conditions behind Kentucky's vote against secessionists (see 1st page to right).

Wm. T. McKinney
The Defeat of the Secessionists in Kentucky in 1861
The Journal of Negro History
(Association for the Study of African American Life and History)
[The University of Chicago Press]
Volume 1, Number 4, October 1916, pages 377-391
PDF JSTOR

McKinney begins his article with a look at the all-important prelude to the secessionist actions that precipitated the founding of the Confederate States of America in 1861. The decisive votes to secede came after years of heated discussion in all nominally Southern states, including Kentucky -- a "border state" which, had it voted to bolt the Union fold and join the Confederacy, might well have tilted the balance of geopolitical power to the South.

Kentuckians in Union and Confederate uniforms

The following article offers a particularly interesting perspective on Kentucky's military role in the Civil War (see 1st page to right).

A. C. Quisenberry
Kentucky Union Troops in the Civil War
Register of Kentucky State Historical Society
Published by Kentucky Historical Society
Volume 18, Number 54, September 1920, Pages 13-18
PDF JSTOR

Quisenberry estimates that "Kentucky furnished many prominent men to the Confederacy, as well as about thirty five thousand soldiers" (page 13), and that "Kentucky furnished 51,000 white volunteers and 23,000 colored-volunteers to the Union army -- a total of 74,000 troops" (page 13).

Later in the article, after adding more troops to the Union side of the ledger, Quisenberry concludes that, "If accurate figures could be obtained, it is believed that the number of Kentuckians who served the Union in the Civil War would not fall far short of 125,000" (page 14) -- which means (1) accurate figures cannot be obtained, and (2) the number would fall short of 125,000 -- qualifications which have been lost on Wikipedia and other unnuanced sources, which tend to stress inflated figures.

Baldwin-Howard loyalties

The Baldwin-Howard family was one of many Virginia families that migrated to Kentucky during the Civil War. Whether they sought refuge from the war, or moved for other reasons, will vary with the family. And many families stayed for a variety of reasons.

Would the Baldwin-Howard family have eventually moved to Kentucky -- or possibly another state -- if not for the war? There is no way of knowing -- without personal testimonies from John or Margaret Baldwin, or from members of related collateral families.

Political issues -- local, state, regional, and national -- probably didn't decide whether a family stayed put or moved during the war. The main concern, for most families, was probably physical safety and the ability to feed itself.

Safety in a herd generally requires gaining the trust of, and cooperating with, others in the herd. A family caught between two herds might survive by remaining neutral, but remaining neutral in times of a civil war in one's own locality can risk the suspicion and enmity of all sides both sides.

My impression from Baldwin-Howard lore is that John R. Baldwin made decisions that could be taken as either pro-Union or neutralist. Given its location in relation to Cumberland Gap and its agricultural productivity -- but perhaps most importantly its political status as part of Virginia, a Confederate state -- Lee County became hostile toward both pro-Union and neutral families.

Cumberland Gap became the object of several battles, and Lee Valley farm produce and other goods attracted military foragers. But above all, most Virginians -- regardless of their political stripes -- were Virginians. The vested interests of most residents of Lee County, including the Baldwin-Howard and related families, were in their farms and communities. When it came to war, most families would herd together to protect their local interests, which meant aiding Confederate forces.

What did it mean to be "Pro-Union" or "neutral" in Lee Valley? Did it mean "anti-slavery" or "anti-Confederacy" or "anti-Virginia" or just "anti-neighbor"?

The dominant "herd" in Lee Valley may simply have been "pro-Virginia". From the viewpoint of a Virginia patriot, the measure of loyalty would have been a commitment to the State of Virginia, less than to the Confederacy. Once the shooting began, the overarching issue for most families would have been to protect their homes and communities -- which meant hanging together as residents of Rose Hill or Jonestown, or of Powell Valley, or of Lee County, or of Virginia -- i.e., being Virginians, never mind the issue of slavery. Reducing the war to one of "anti-slavists" against "slavists" is an artifact of latterday -- not contemporary -- politics.

Once widespread shooting started, provoked by military acts taken in the interest of seizing or protecting a Union military facility in South Carolina, a Confederate state, the question of loyalty in Virginia was not so much to the Confederacy, but to Virginia as part of the Confederacy -- a one-for-all, all-for-one, "if you're not with us, you're against us" stance.

In any event, the Baldwin-Howard family was not alone among Lee County families to pack up and leave for new homes in Kentucky and elsewhere that offered more safety if not also more land and other economic opportunities -- mainly in the interest of the family, not a state, much less the Confederacy or Union.

See The Civil and Pacific Wars for a closer took at
the several "one-cause" schools and their drawbacks.

John R. Baldwin (1828-1909)

Baldwin 1863

July-August 1863, 6th Sub-District, Owsley County, Kentucky
John R. Balden [sic], 34, White, Farmer, Married, Virginia born

Enrollments enumerated in July and August 1863, transcribed to this register on 1 February 1864
under direction of Capt. Robert Hays, Provost Marshal, 8th Congressional District, Kentucky

Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Click on following image to enlarge

Baldwin 1863

Halltown John R. Baldwin

Baldwin JR Halltown

AboveCover of file for "Halltown John R. Baldwin" Co. B, 2 Reg't, Virginia Infantry
Below 2 of 26 Company Muster Roll chits and other records
Recruited in Halltown, Jefferson County, Virginia, 18 April 1861
Mustered into service in Harpers Ferry, Jefferson County, 11 May 1861
Detailed as teamster, forage master, and quarter master sergeant
Paroled from Union captivity at Appomattox Court House, 9 April 1865
Copped from Fold3

Baldwin JR Halltown Baldwin JR Halltown
Halltown Harpers Ferry Virginians gather in Halltown, Virginia, around 5:00 pm on the evening of 18 April 1861
They march of Harpers Ferry, about 10 miles northeast of Halltown, and by 10:00 pm they have attacked and destroyed the U.S. Army arsenal at Harpers Ferry. The blast and flames lit up the night sky and the explosion rocked the surrounding hills.
Sketch by D. H. Strother, copped from Son of the South
Baldwin JR Halltown Baldwin JR Halltown

2nd Regiment Virginia Infantry and Company B
Images screen captured from
Harlan H. Hinkle
Grayback Mountaineers:
The Confederate Face of West(ern) Virginia

Lincoln (NB): iUniverse, 2003
x, 319 pages, scanned by Google Books

Richmond John R. Baldwin

Baldwin JR Richmond

AboveCover of file for "Richmond John R. Baldwin" Co. D, 25 Batt'n, Virginia Infantry
Below 2 of 10 Company Muster Roll chits and other records
Recruited in Richmond, Virginia, 26 August 1861
Served as teamster, forage master, and quarter master
Paroled from Union captivity at Farmsville, 11-21 April 1865
Copped from Fold3

Baldwin JR Richmond Baldwin JR Richmond

Thomas N. Baldwin (1843-1924)

Baldwin TN Rose Hill

AboveCover of file for "Thomas N. Baldwin" Co. D / K, 37 Virginia Infantry
Below 2 of 21 Company Muster Roll chits and other records
Enlisted in Rose Hill, Virginia, 22 May 1861
Paid $50.00 Bounty Pay for reenlistment at Fort Mason, 22 February 1862
Mustered in as Private, elected Corporal on 23 April 1862, mustered out as Corporal
Paroled from Union captivity at Appomattox Court House, 9 April 1865
Copped from Fold3

Baldwin TN Rose Hill Baldwin TN Rose Hill

Parolled Prisoner's Pass
"permission to go home . . . and remain undisturbed"

Paroled Prisoner Pass "Paroled Prisoner's Pass" issued at Appomatox Court House, Va., April 10th, 1865
Copped from National Park Service, Department of the Interior

James Alvin and Henry Clay Thomas
A father and son on the home front

James Alvin Thomas Click on image to enlarge
Mary A. Thomas as widow of James A. Thomas
Served in Company C, 1st Tennessee Infantry
Record of filing for widow benefits in Kentucky
Filed 25 July 1890, Appl 463,037, no Cert No.
Mary A. Thomas (b1826) was widowed in 1862
She remarried John V. Orton (b1895) on 14 July 1867
Both were still alive but living apart in 1870 census

Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Henry Clay Thomas Click on image to enlarge
Martha J. Thomas as widow of Henry C. Thomas
Served in Company A, 10th Illinois Infantry
then in Company E, 2nd Tennessee Infantry
Record of filing for widow benefits in Kentucky
Filed 11 March 1904, Appl 801,724, Cert 594,862
Henry Clay Thomas died on 2 Jan 1904 in Georgetown, KY
Martha Jane Brown died on 15 Sep 1912 in Shelbyville, IN
All 12 children were alive in 1900, and 10 were alive in 1910

Copped and cropped from FamilySearch
Thomas Henry Clay deposition

Click on image to enlarge

Henry Clay Thomas during the War of the Rebellion

Part of 27 March 1889 deposition by Henry Clay Thomas
regarding himself and his parents during the War of the Rebellion

Image copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Originally shared and transcribed by Russell Thompson

The following transcription was posted by Russell Thompson on Ancestry.com (viewed 22 February 2020).
The remarks in [square brackets] are his.
The Purple highlighting and red remarks in <angle brackets> are mine.
Note in particular that Russell's "Minks" are written "Mink's" (meaning "Mink's place") and "Mink".
I have reformated the received transcription to show the paragraph breaks and signature
as they appear on the image of the original document.
See comments under Henry Clay Thomas to the left.

Transcription of text in document

Page 8

I was too small to serve, and they [two unreadable words] us to war. I did stay with this regiment awhile but, I did nothing but cook, and fetched water, and waited on the officers. And in fact I did <2 overstruck letters> [unreadable word] things <sic = anything> they asked me to do. I can't say further if not I was enlisted and [unreadable word] into their Tenn. Regiment. I may had a gun. They told me I was too small and had better go back to my mother; and I went back to where my [Transcribers note: compare this word my with other in this document, and the next word is lined out.] mother was, and found she [two unreadable words] of her [unreadable word], and gone to within 5 or 6 miles of Camp Wilson. My mother was then at her sisters Harriet Minks <sic = Mink's>, and I came by and told her I was going to Illinois. My father was in a Tenn. Regiment and died of measles at my mother's sister's house in 1862 I think. And mother was there with Mrs. Minks <sic = Mink> when I came by.
I think the Tenn. regiment I undertook to join was the 2nd Inf., and I believe Co. E.
I can't name any of the officers [two unreadable words] in that Co. [unreadable word] I think I had an uncle Henry C.

[Signed] Henry Thomas,              
----------------------------------------------------
Deponent.

[Transcribed by Russell G. Thompson, Sanford, Florida, December 18, 2012, Henry Clay Thomas, National Archive Materials, 52-59, Deposition A, Pg. 8, No. 649009, March 27, 1889.]

[Additional corrections done by Russell G. Thompson, Sanford, Florida, May 25, 2014, with new information from James Alvin Thomas, NARA Form 85D, Full Pension File-Civil War, WC--178.061, Jesse Rogers, Guardian Sworn Declaration, March 17, 1783, that clarified the involvement of Harriet Minks.]

Thomas Henry Clay guardian

Click on image to enlarge

Widowed wives, orphaned children

Guardian of 5 minor children of James Alvin Thomas, deceased,
seeks relief under 6 June 1866 Pension Act on grounds that they had been
abandoned by their mother, who was unsuitable by reason of immoral conduct

in 17 March 1873 deposition by Jesse Rogers, guardian, to Chancery Court of Claiborne County, Tennessee
Image copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Originally shared and transcribed by Russell Thompson

The above transcription, by Russell G. Thompson,
was originally posted on Ancestry.com on 30 May 2014 (viewed 22 February 2020).
The yellow highlighting is Russell's. See comments under James Alvin Thomas to the left.
Thompson attribted the transcribed document to
"James Alvin Thomas, NARA Form 85D, Full Pension File -- Civil War, WC178.061."

Pensions for children of widowed mothers
who abandoned them or were found unsuitable

FORM OF DECLARATION OF
Guardian of Minor Children for Pension
UNDER ACT OF JUNE 6, 1866

The formal language of the above transcription is mostly boilerplate.

Congress began passing pension acts during the War of the Rebellion, and the variety of pensions and conditions for receiving them frequently changed over the nearly 150 years during which there were pensioners. As of 2017, an 87-year-old woman was still receiving a pension as the daughter of a Civil War veteran.

The act approved by Congress on 6 June 1866 was one of the more important early postbellum pension measures in that it made specific provisions for children whose widowed mothers had either (1) abandoned them, or (2) were regarded as unable to raise them. Guardians of such children applied for benefits through a formal procedure that required a written declaration of the circumstances that justified granting a pension. The declaration was an affidavit or deposition made or taken under oath, and signed, in the presence of a witness or attestor, most commonly a notary public.

Notary publics and others legally authorized to witness or attest to the authenticity of a written testimony generally followed established forms when it came to phrasing. A typical "Form of declaration of guardian of minor children for pension" under the 6 June 1866 act looked like this (examples culled from parts of on-line transcriptions of actually declarations).

Example 1
On this Sixth day of July A.D 1867, personally appeared before me, Deputy Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas in and for the City & County of New York, Xaver Schillinger aged thirty years, a resident of East New York, in the County of Kings and State of New York and whose Post Office address is Liberty Avenue in the County and State aforesaid, who, being duly sworn according to law, doth on oath make the following declaration, as Guardian of the minor child of John Moelig deceased, in order to obtain the benefits of the provision made by the eleventh section of the act of Congress approved June 6, 1866, granting pensions to the minor child or children under sixteen years of age of deceased officers, soldiers, or seamen, who have left a widow still surviving, and she having abandoned the care of said child or children, or having been declared an unsuitable person to have charge of the same. He further declares that he is the Guardian of Amelia Josephine Moelig whose father was a Private in Company "A" Corps of Engineers United States Army in the war of 1861, and that the said John Moelig died at Fort Pickens, Fla. On the First day of June A.D. 1861; in consequence of injuries received in the line of duty, that the mother of said child aforesaid remarried on the 10th day of February 1863, and that the date of birth of said ward is as follows: Amelia Josephine Moelig born on the 6th day of June 1858.

Example 2
On this 23rd day of September A.D. 1868, personally appeared before me, (1) J. G. Strong a Notary Public (2) Ann Durgan aged 47 years, a resident of Toledo, in the County of Tama and State of Iowa and whose Post Office address is Toledo, in the County and State aforesaid, who, being duly sworn according to law, doth on oath make the following declaration, as Guardian of the minor child of Stephen A. Stiles deceased, in order to obtain the benefits of the provision made by the eleventh section of the act of Congress approved June 6, 1866, granting pensions to the minor child or children under sixteen years of age of deceased officers, soldiers, or seamen, who have left a widow still surviving, and she having abandoned the care of said child or children, or having been declared an unsuitable person to have charge of the same. She further declares that she is the Guardian of (3) Minerva M. Stiles whose father was a Private in Company I, 28th Regiment of Iowa Infantry Vols in the war of 1861, and that the said Stephen A. Stiles died at Richland Iowa on the 23d day of August A.D. 1865; (4) of disease contracted while in the service of the United States that the mother of the child aforesaid (5) has remarried and that the date of birth of said ward is as follows: 25th day of February A. D. 1856.

William and Elihu Moles
Different fates of brothers who married Baldwin and Grubb widows

William H. Moles Click on image to enlarge
William H. Moles as deceased POW at Rock Island Barracks, Illinois
Moles William H. Pri 27 Va I Jonesville Va Oct 9 [1863] Jany 20 [63] Feby 5 [1864] Varicola 378 South of Prison Barracks
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
William H. Moles William H. Moles's tombstone
Confederate Cemetery, Rock Island, Illinois
378 WM. H. MOLES CO. I 27 BATT'N VY. CAV C.S.A.
Photograph by john whitledge copped from Find a Grave
William H. Moles Click on image to enlarge
Harriet Moles as widow of Elihu H. Moles
Served in Company C, 19th Kentucky Infantry Regiment
Record of filing for widow benefits in Indiana
Filed 31 July 1890, Appl 467,591, Cert 308,228
Copped from Ancestry.com
Elihu H. Moles Harriet Moles

Harriet Moles, 1836-1907
The Press, Muncie, Indiana
Thursday, 18 July 1907, page 5
Clipped from Newspapers.com

According to this obituary
Harriet died on Tuesday
16 July 1907

Click on image to enlarge
Elihu H. Moles, 1837-1890
Yeoman Cemetery, Yeoman, Indiana
Photograph by Teresa Grissom from Find a Grave

Monument inscriptions
Born [ . . . ] Va / May 10, 1837
Died / April 5, 1890 / AGED 52ys. 10Ms. 25Ds.
2nd LIEUT Co C 19th REGT / KY VOL INF" (?)

2nd Lieutenant Elihu H. Moles discharged as casualty from 19th Regiment of Kentucky volunteers
Official Army Register of the Volunteer Force of the United States Army for the Years 1861, '62, '63, '64, '65, Part IV
West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama,
Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, Tennessee, Kentucky
Published by the order of the Secretary of War, in compliance with
the joint resolution of the Senate and House of Representatives, approved March 2, 1865
Adjudant General's Office, Washington, August 31, 1865
Image captured from MyHeritage.com PDF file
Elihu Moles

Kentucky in Civil War
Between a rock and a hard place

McKinney 1916 1st page of Wm. T. McKinney, "The Defeat of the Secessionists in Kentucky in 1861"
The Journal of Negro History (Association for the Study of African American Life and History) [The University of Chicago Press]
Volume 1, Number 4, October 1916, pages 377-391
Image captured from JSTOR PDF file
Quisenberry 1920 1st page of A. C. Quisenberry, "Kentucky Union Troops in the Civil War"
Register of Kentucky State Historical Society (Kentucky Historical Society)
Volume 18, Number 54, September 1920, pages 13-18
Image captured from JSTOR PDF file

Civil War issues in 2020
Ideological medicine for historical indigestion

Children of Confederacy Creed "Children of the Confederacy Creed" plaque in Texas Capitol
Erected on 7 August 1959, removed on 13 January 2019 on grounds that it made historically false claims
Image of plaque copped from 1 February 2019 web edition of article by Mike Clark-Madison
Racist Confederate Plaque Needs a Forever Home
State Preservation Board mulls over what to do with
defrocked "Children of the Confederacy Creed" plaque
The Austin Chronicle, Friday, 1 February, 2019

Garbage or heritage?

One critic considers the "Children of the Confederacy Creed" plaque "counterfactual propaganda" intended, when erected in 1959, to "discredit the growing civil rights movement in the United States".

Another opponent of the plaque hopes that it will be melted down as scrap.

However, the United Daughters of the Confederacy, Children of the Confederacy's parent organization, claims that the plaque was not given to the State of Texas and wants it back.

Texas's State Preservation Board, though, began mulling over whether and how to preserve the plaque as an artifact of the state's social and political history a century after the war.

The main standoff is between people who are labled "denialists" because they believe that the Civil War was not over slavery -- and people who reduce the war to a collision of slavists and anti-slavists. The latter include people who would ban and even criminalize the public expression of "denialist" opinion as "hate speech" -- reminiscent of movements and laws in some European and Asian states concerning the political and social histories of events related to World War II.

7 August 1959 "Children of the Confederacy Creed" Plaque

. . . the War Between the States was not a rebellion, nor was its underlying cause to sustain slavery. . . .

1, 2, 23 February 1861 State of Texas
A Declaration of the causes which impel the State of Texas
to Secede from the Federal Union

[ Page 2 of 8 pages, Paragraph 3 ]

Texas abandoned her separate national existence and consented to become one of the Confederated States to promote her welfare, insure domestic tranquility and secure more substantially the blessings of peace and liberty to her people. She was received into the confederacy with her own constitution, under the guarantee of the federal constitution and the compact of annexation, that she should enjoy these blessings. She was received as a commonwealth holding, maintaining and protecting the institution known as negro slavery -- the servitude of the African to the white race within her limits -- a relation that had existed from the first settlement of her wilderness by the white race, and which her people intended should exist in all future time. Her institutions and geographical position established the strongest ties between her and other slave-holding States of the confederacy. Those ties have been strengthened by association. But what has been the course of the government of the United States, and of the people and authorities of the non-slave-holding States, since our connection with them?

16 May 1861 Kentucky Resolution of Neutrality

Considering the deplorable condition of the country and for which the State of Kentucky is in no way responsible, and looking to the best means of preserving the internal peace and securing the lives, liberty, and property of the citizens of the State; therefore,

Resolved, by the House of Representatives, that this State and the citizens thereof should take no part in the civil war now being waged, except as mediators and friends to the belligerent parties; and that Kentucky should, during the contest, occupy the position of strict neutrality.

Resolved, that the act of the governor in refusing to furnish troops or military force upon the call of the executive authority of the United States under existing circumstances is approved.

20 May 1861 Neutrality proclamation by Kentucky governor Beriah Magoffin

Proclamation issued by Kentucky Governor Beriah Magoffin declaring Kentucky's neutrality in the Civil War.
Magoffin states that neither Confederate nor Union forces may enter the state without his approval.
A note on the back indicates that the proclamation was "entered in full in Executive Journal, May 28, 1861."

The above description was cited -- and the following image was copped, cropped, and compressed -- from
Duke University Digital Repository
Click on image to enlarge
Kentucky governor's proclamation

Top  

Baldwin-Howard lore
The tall and short of John R. and Margaret Baldwin "war stories"

The stuff of legends

What is a war story?

A war story could be just that -- an account of a wartime experience, told by anyone who was there, or by a descendant of a soldier, veteran, or civilian who was there. More likely, though, a "war story" is a "fish story" in which the teller amplifies, stretches, ellaborates, or embellishes the truth. Some war stories, though, are imaginary tales or yarns concocted to entertain if not deceive.

Obituaries have the qualities of heroic war stories. The deceased, who has lost the battle but won the war with life, is memorialzied with accounts of qualities and achievements that weigh on the positive side of the scales of character and behavior.

Obituaries are often written under duress, in compliance with formulas, and without the benefit of fact checking by family members or others who may be more familiar with the history of the deceased than the obituary writer or editor. For these reasons, obituaries are known to score low on objectivity, accuracy, and completeness, and may otherwise fail to qualify as the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.

Baldwin descendant stories

I am a great-great grandchild of John R. and Maragret Baldwin of the Baldwin-Howard union, through my father. I never met my paternal-maternal Baldwin great grandfather, Newton Bascum Baldwin (1862-1919). Though my paternal-maternal great grandfather, Martha Ellen Steele (1863-1943), appears to have held me in her arms a few months after I was born in 1941, she passed away a month after I turned 2. And I never met my paternal grandparents Ida Mae Baldwin (1890-1923) or William Riley Wetherall (1890-1936), both of whom had died before I was born. My own father, William Bascom Wetherall (1911-2013), vaguely remembered only one occasion of being with his mother, and he could clearly remember living with his father only while attending high school after his father had remarried and started a second family. He was close to "Grandma Baldwin" -- or "Ellen" as Martha Ellen Baldwin was called in her family -- and his Baldwin aunts and cousins in Idaho and Washington.

My father knew the names of his Baldwin-Howard and Steele-Grubb great grandparents in Kentucky. But he had no photographs of them, and he never talked about them. I cannot recall hearing the name "Baldwin" or even "Kentucky" before the 1990s or so, when I was in my 50s and became engrossed in identifying old family photographs. Most were from my mother's side, and I already knew quite a bit about her family. Only a few were from my father's side, and he thought I was wasting my time asking about them.

My maternal grandfather was born in Oregon to a family that had migrated west from northern states before the Civil War, and he died when I was 8. My maternal grandmother was born in Missouri 25 years after the war, but if she told stories about her ancestors during the war, I never heard them.

My father recalled that his paternal great grandfather, George Washington Beaman (1838-1922), had talked about the Civil War but wasn't sure if GWB had fought in the war. My father was partly raised by his Wetherall-Beaman grandparents, and the 1920 census for Knoxville, Iowa, shows him living with them, when he was 9, along with GWB, who was then 81.

When pursuring GWB's life on Ancestry.com, I saw that many Wetherall-Beaman and Beaman-Shoemaker family trees claimed he had served in Company C of the fabled 27th Iowa Regiment. However, close examination of census and other records showed that the GWB who had served with the 27th Iowa was another GWB. And I ran across a report by another researcher who had come to the same conclusion. For a "war story" of how skepticism led to the debunking of the Beaman-Shoemaker and Wetherall-Beaman "war story", see George Washington Beaman and the Civil War on the Wetherall-Beaman and related families page of this website.

Of interest to me today -- in 2020, over 150 years after the War Between the States -- is what sort of Baldwin-Howard war stories survive among descendants of John R. and Margaret Baldwin. I am a descendant -- a great-great grandson through their 5th child, Newton Bascum Baldwin (1861-1919), whose 4th daughter, Ida Mae Baldwin (1890-1923), was my paternal grandmother. However, I did not become familiar these names until I was in my 50s, in the 1990s, when my father was in his 80s. Before then, the name "Baldwin" would not have caught my attention.

I did not begin to seriously explore my paternal grandmother's Baldwin-Steele lines untl after my father's death in 2013. Through Ancestry.com, I became aware of how some family trees for John R. Baldwin of the Baldwin-Howard union had associated him with one or another "John R. Baldwin" or "John Baldwin" in Civil War records. However, I did not encounter John R. and Margaret Baldwin Civil War stories until joining the Baldwin Genealogy group on Facebook, launched by B.J. Baldwin Rudder on 1 July 2017. by The Baldwin genealogy group on Facebook in 2017.

One of the most rewarding aspects of being invited to join the Baldwin Genealogy group on 22 November 2018 has been the opportunity hear Baldwin-Howard "war stories" from distant cousins, some of them born and raised in Baldwin families in the localities where John R. and Margaret lived the last half-century of their lives. The stories are two, three, even four generations removed from their source, so the lines between fact and fantasy are going to be blurred. But stories are stories, regardless of their literal credibility.

Here I will examine the most prominent stories posted on Baldwin Genealogy, in the light of "facts" and "suppositions based on facts" -- in an attempt to separate what is probably true in the stories, from what cannot be confirmed.

Top  


TN Baldwin Emily Baldwin

AboveGrave markers for "N B" (left) and "E B" (right)
Photographs by faye marcum
copped and cropped from Find a Grave
BelowTombstone for "Newton" and "Emily" Baldwin
Cop of image shared by JLK Shack on Ancestry.com

Baldwin TN Emily

Story 1

Thomas N. Baldwin in Confederate service

The memorial article on Thomas N. Baldwin shown to the right is not an obituary, but it has the congratulatory feel of one.

The description of T.N. Baldwin's Civil War service -- "under the command of Stonewall Jackson" then "under the command of General Lee" in battles "from Bull Run to Appomatox [sic = Appomattox]" -- is boilerplate Civil War narrative. It tells us nothing about T.N. Baldwin's actual wartime movements and engagements. Phrases like "served under the Stars and Bars" and "became a soldier of the Cross" are also common expressions, combined here in word play.

The name of his military unit, and his presence at Appomattox at the end of the war, appear to be accurate. Presumably he was wounded as described. And he did settle in Laurel County -- but when is not clear. The 1870 census places enumerates. on the same sheet, both Thomas N. and John R. Baldwin farming in Sturgeon Princinct in Jackson County. He does not show up in Raccoon Creek until the 1880 census, after which later censuses also show him in Raccoon Creek.

Cleveland Bales is, in fact, enumerated on Twin Branch Road in Laurel County in the 1940 census, three years before the memorial article was published. If Thomas N. Baldwin found his "oldest brother" [John R. Baldwin] living in Raccoon Creek after the Civil War, then how do we explain the assertion in Story 2 (below) that John R. Baldwin found his family in Moores Creek after the war?

The historical Moores Creek Post Office (1885-1984) was in Jackson County, slighly east of the presentday community of Moores Creek, which is roughly 11.7 miles (15 minutes) south west of Gray Hawk. 3.5 miles (7 minutes) by car southwest of Annville, and about 4.2 miles (11 minutes) north and east of the Terrells Creek area in southern Jackson County where John R. Baldwin and several of his descendants are found in late 19th century censuses. Raccoon Creek addresses today are within London, the seat of Laurel County, about 13.6 miles (17 minutes) further southwest of Moores Creek, and about 13.5 miles (18 minutes) to the west and south of Terrells Creek.

Thomas N. Baldwin's Civil War time line

1840 census for Lee County in Virginia shows "John M. Baldwin" as the head of a household consisting of 8 members including himself -- all "Free White Persons" of the following ages by sex. The conjectured names and ages, keyed to the 1850 census (below), are mine, and several are uncertain.

      Male  Female  Totals  Conjectured names and ages   
  0-4    1     1       2    Joseph 2 (1838), Harriet 6
  5-9    1     1       2    William 10 (1829), Sarah 7 (1833-09-02)
10-14    1     1       2    John R. 12 (1828-09-22), Mary Ann 14 (1825)
15-19
20-29
30-39    1     1       2    John M. 38, Elizabeth 34 (1838)
---------------------------
Totals   4      4      8
1 person engaged in agriculture.

29 Oct 1843 (0) Thomas Newton Baldwin -- T.N. Baldwin -- T. Newt Baldwin -- Newton Baldwin -- born in Lee County, Virginia.
3 Mar 1847 (3) Emily Catherine Carrier -- Emily C., Emily -- born in Laurel County, Kentucky.
1850 census (7) shows "Thomas N. Baldwin" (7) enumerated in District 31 of Lee County, Virginia, with his father John M. Baldwin (58), mother Elizabeth (44), and 4 older and 2 younger siblings. His father, and William (20), the oldest sibling still living at home, are farming.
1850 census (7) for Laurel County, Kentucky, shows "E.C. Carrier" (6) with her parents, 3 older brothers, and 1 younger sister.
1860 census (16) enumerates "Thos. N. Baldwin" (16) in "The Western District" of Lee County, Jonesville Post Office, in the household of his oldest brother John R. Baldwin (31) and Margaret (22), with 3 of Rebecca's and 2 of Margaret's children. John R. Baldwin is a farmer, Margaret Baldwin is a housekeeper, and Thomas N. Baldwin is a farm laborer.
1860 census (16) for Laurel County, Kentucky, shows "Emly [sic] C. Carrier" (15) with her parents, and 1 older brother and 2 younger sisters. There is another, larger Carrier family in Laurel county with an Emily Carrier (11).


12 Apr 1861 (17) Civil War begins at Fort Sumter in South Carolina
22 May 1861 (17) Thomas N. Baldwin enlisted in Confederate Army in Rose Hill, Lee County, Virginia, and served in Company E (and at times Company K), 37 Virginia Infantry, for the duration of the Civil War. He mustered in as a Private and was a Corporal when paroled at the end of the war.
10 May 1863 (19) General Johnathan Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson (1824-1863) died of complications from pneumonia 8 days after being accidentally shot 3 times, twice in the left arm, by Confederate pickets. His left arm had to be amputated.
"Pickets" were soldiers posted in front of a position to provide warning of enemy movements toward the position. Forward guards deployed along a permiter formed a "picket line".
9 Apr 1865 (21) Civil War ends at Appomattox in Virginia


9 Apr 1865 (21) Thomas N. Baldwin paroled at Appomattox on or (most likely) shortly after this day.
See Thomas N. Baldwin under John R. Baldwin and the War of the Rebellion of 1861-1865 (above) for a detailed description and analysis of records related to Thomas N. Baldwin's military service during the Civil War.
[Spring-Summer] 1865 (21) T.N. Baldwin "walks" home, presumably to Rose Hill, Lee County, Virginia. Finding his home "broken", he makes his way to Big Raccoon Creek in Laurel County, Kentucky, where he was told his oldest brother [John R. Baldwin] lived (1943 newspaper memorial).

Walking from Appomattox to Rose Hill

As a paroled prisoner of war, T.N. Baldwin would have been issued a Paroled Prisoner's Pass that permitted him to return home and remain there without being disturbed. The pass would also have helped him obtain food and transportation enroute where that was possible. See notes on Terms of surrender and Paroled Prisoner's Pass for details and an image of such a pass (above).

The memorial article states that one of T.N. Baldwin's legs had been severely wounded beneath the knee, and that a ball of shot was removed from his leg just above the ankle 3 years later. When he was wounded is not known. The earliest he could have been wounded would have been shortly after his enlistment in the spring of 1861, which would mean that the shot was removed around the spring of 1864. The latest he could have been wounded was in one of running battles leading up to Lee's surrender in the spring of 1865, which would mean that the shot was removed around the spring of 1868, after T.N. Baldwin had settled in Kentucky.

As a young farm boy turned soldier he was probably fit, though perhaps exhausted and a bit undernourished at the time Lee surrendered. So assuming that he was able to walk, how long would it have taken him to walk from Appomattox to Rose Hill, where he had enlisted? The distance between the towns on today's roads is around 295 miles (475 kilometers), which would take about 5 hours non-stop at 60 miles/hour by car. On foot it would take about 10 days at 30 miles/day, 15 days at 20 miles/day, 20 days at 15 miles/day, and 30 days at 10 hours/day -- on today's roads.

[Fall] 1865 (22) T.N. Baldwin reportedly marries Emily C. Carrier in Laurel County, Kentucky.
Oct 1865 (22) Surmised conception of 1st child, John C. Baldwin.
30 Jul 1866 Birth of 1st child, John C. Baldwin, in Laurel County. John C. Baldwin (25) married Matilda A. Bell (22) at her Laurel-County residence on 5 September 1889. Addie B. Baldwin, born on 28 August 1867 in Owsley County, died on 5 June 1955. John died in Boyle in Laurel County on 8 June 1958. They are buried under headstones of similar design in Carrier Cemetery in Laurel County.
1870 census (26) "Thos. N. Baldwin" (24) [sic = 26] is enumerated in Sturgeon Precinct No. 6, Gray Hawk Post Office, Jackson County, with his wife "Emily" (21) [sic = 23] and 2 children, "John C." (3) and "Elizabeth A." (1). The same enumeration sheet shows "John R. Baldwin" (41) with his wife Margaret (34) and their 8 children, the oldest 2 of whom were Rebecca's. The houshold includes Margaret's younger brother "James N. Howard" (23), a farm laborer, and "Sarah E. Thomas" (16), a domestic servant born in Virginia -- possibly the daughter a Thomas family John R. Baldwin had known in Lee County.
1880 census (36) "Newton Bawldwin" (34) [sic = 36] enumerated in Raccoon Precinct No. 2" in Laurel County, Kentucky, with his wife "Emily" (33) and 6 children, from "John C." (14) to "Joseph" (2). Newton is a farmer, Emily is keeping house, John C. works on farm, and the oldest daughter, "Elizabeth" (11), is at home.
1900 census (56) "Thomas N. Baldwin" (56) [sic = 54], born Oct 1847, enumerated in Raccoon, Laurel County, Kentucky, with wife his "Emily C." (53), born Mar 1847, and 6 children, of 8 living of 9 children born to them. 3 of the children are "school teachers". They had been married for 33 years, which implies they had married between roughly June 1866 and May 1867.
20 Jul 1908 Emily C. Baldwin dies. She is buried in Carrier Cemetery in Laurel County. Laurel-county-born mother Marilla Rilda Moore (1816–1907) and Tennessee-born father Stephen W. Carrier (1813–1900), a few earlier family members, a few of her siblings, and her husband Thomas N. Baldwin and 3 of their children, are also buried in the cemetery.
1910 census (66) Raccoon Precinct, Laurel County, Kentucky. Widowed, farmer, with 2 adult single sons "professors" in a public school, adult single daughter a "teacher" of music, and an adult daughter who is a widow without an occupation. Living next door is a married son, a farmer, with his wife and a son.
1920 census (76) Enumerated for Raccoon Precinct, Laurel County, Kentucky, shows "Newton Baldwin" as the head of the household, a farmer on a general found with a single adult son, a farmer on a home farm, and 2 single adult daughters, one with no occupation, the other a music teacher at home.
10 Mar 1924 (80) Thomas Newton Baldwin died of apoplexy (stroke) in McWhorter Voting Precinct in Laurel County, Kentucky. The informant on his death certificate was his son Joe C. Baldwin, who gave Lee County as the birth place of his father, and his paternal grandparents, John M. Baldwin and Elizabeth Seale. T.N. Baldwin was scheduled to be buried in Carrier Cemetery on 11 March 1924, the day after he died. He and Emily are buried as simply "T.N.B." and "E.C.B." under small tomb markers of similar design, apparently in the vicinity of a tombstone bearing their names and full dates of birth and death.

Cleveland Bales, Big Racoon Creek, and Twin Branch Road

The 1940 census for Magisterial District 3 of Laurel County, Kentucky, shows "Cleveland Bales" (57) living with his wife (54) and widowed father (86) on "Twin Branch Road" -- addresses for which today (2020) are within the postal catchment of London, the county seat. Bales and his wife are recorded as having completed "0" grades of school. His father completed "8" years.

There is a "Twin Branch Methodist Church" on Twin Branch Road today. "Big Raccoon Creek" figures in the history of Laurel County in the late 18th century, before Kentucky became a state in 1792, and long before Laurel County's birth in 1825. "Raccoon Creek" runs through McWhorter, in Laurel County, between Moores Creek to the north and east in Jackson County, and London, Laurel County's seat, to the south and west. McWhorter Rd., which runs southeast from McWhorter almost as far as London, crosses Twin Branch Road a bit south of McWhorter. These place names, while not synonymous, and very close to each other.

Susong tombstone Jake and Elizabeth Susong's tombstone
Susong Cemetery, Ewing, Lee County, Virginia
Photograph by Phillip Creek copped from Find a Grave

Elizabeth Ann Baldwin (1869-1951)

Thomas Newton and Emily Catherine Baldwin's oldest daughter, Elizabeth "Lizzie" Ann Baldwin (1869-1951), died 19 May 1951 (see death certificate to right), 10 years after the death of her husband Jake Susong (1870-1941). The 1940 census shows them living in Rose Hill Magisterial District of Lee County, Virginia. He is 69 and she is 70. Living with them is his younger brother, Thurmon Susong, who is 51 and single. Thurmon is farming. Jake is unable to work and Elizabeth is doing housework at home. Jake and Thurmon have finished only 4 years of schooling. Elizabeth has completed 4 years of high school.

Jacob "Jake" Susong was born and raised in Rose Hill in Lee County, Virginia. Elizabeth married him in Laurel County on 20 October 1892, but by the end of the century, they had settled around Rose Hill. The 1900 census shows them living in Gibson Station Voting Precinct in Lee County. The 1920 and 1930 censuses shows them living in Rose Hill District (precinct), which embraces Gibson Station. Elizabeth died on 19 May 1951 in Wheeler, in Rose Hill Magisterial District in Lee County. She and Jake are buried in Susong Cemetery in Ewing.

T.N. Baldwin's daughter Elizabeth, in settling with her husband in the vicinity of her husband's natal home in Lee County, returned to the vicinity of her father's -- and John R. Baldwin's -- Baldwin-Seale homeland.

Wheeler, Ewing, Rose Hill, Jonesville,
Pennington Gap, Poor Valley, Harlan

The unincorporated community of Wheeler is today billed the westernmost populated area of Virginia. 6.5 miles further west on U.S. 58 is Cumberland Gap, on the border of Virginia and Kentucky, which is only a quarter of a mile northeast of the tristate marker where the borders of Virginia and Kentucky meet the border of Tennessee. Cumberland Gap is a pass over the southern part of the Cumberland Mountains, which are part of the Appalachian Mountains, and thus serves as a pass over both mountains. The town of Cumberland Gap is in Tennessee.

Ewing is midway between Rose Hill and Wheeler, which is shortly before Gibson Station, just shy of Cumberland Gap. All these communities are on U.S. Route 58, a few miles west of Jonesville, which is is a few miles westbound on U.S. 58 out of Pennington Gap.

The "old" Harlan road began from Jonesville. The "new" Harlan road begins from the juncture of U.S. Route 421 and U.S. Route 58 in the southern part of Pennington Gap. As northbound U.S. 421 passes through the northern part of Pennington Gap, on its way to Harlan, it crosses Poor Valley. where John R. and Margaret Baldwin lived for a while around the time of the 1860 census.

For certain, travel on the old road would have required strong and sure-footed horses, sturdy wagons, and stout legs. The original road had none of the features that characterize the design and engineering of the present road, built for high speed motor vehicles. Like many other paved roads through mountainous terrain, however, U.S. 421 undoubtedly includes stretches of an original route that over the years has been improved by realigning old curves and tangents while widening and banking, and building new segments that straighten curves, tunnel through hills, bridge ravines, and bypass a ghost town or two.

The route traveled by Margaret Baldwin and her children to Harlan, in stories that survive in Baldwin-Howard lore, remains unclear. As of this writing (2021), I am unable to determine to what extent, if any, the present Harlan road out of Pennington Gap is related to the original Jonesville-Harlan road vaguely described in a few sources and partly shown on some maps.

Top  


Story 2

John R. Baldwin during the Civil War

How do the events reported in Story 1 about Thomas N. Baldwin's life compare with the events reported in Story 2 about John R. Baldwin during and after the Civil War? And how do the events in both stories compare with what we are able to document or surmise about John R. Baldwin's activities and whereabouts during the same time frames?

The following chronology of events -- some documented, others surmised -- provides a ruler with which to measure the plausibility of the events reported in stories that have been handed down through several generations of hearsay.

As I have already substantially outlined John R. Baldwin's life in John R. Baldwin's Mexican War time line (above), I will here focus on 12 years in the middle of his life, from ages 30-41, which lead up to and follow the Civil War.

John R. Baldwin's Civil War time line

See John R. Baldwin's Mexican War time line for the chronology of his life from 1828 to 1858.
[30] Oct 1859 (31) Death of "Sarah" [Sarah J. or Mary J.] Baldwin, daughter of John R. and Margaret Baldwin, in Poor Valley, Lee County, Virginia, from consumption, at 6 months old [4 months 7 days if born on 23 June 1859]. See Margaret Baldwin's children (above) for particulars.
Apr-June 1859 Surmised birth of daughter "Sarah" (Sarah J., Mary J.) in Poor Valley, Lee County, according to Christening and death records. See Margaret's children (above) for particulars.
Oct 1859 Death of daughter "Sarah Baldwin" of consumption, in Western District of Lee County, Virginia. See Margaret's children (above) for variations in names and dates.
1860 census (31) Living with Margaret and 6 children in Jonesville Post Office area of the Western District of Lee County, Virginia (Enumerated 6 Jul 1860). 5 of the children are Baldwin-Howard offspring -- "Elisabeth L." 10 and "John M." 8 (Rebecca's children), and "Mary E. D." 7, "Wm. H." 4, and "Robbert E." 3 (Margaret's children). The 6th child is Thos. N. Baldwin, John R. Baldwin's younger brother. Their father, John M. Baldwin (1802-1855), had died in Nov 1855, about 5 months after John R. Baldwin and Margaret married, J.R. and T.N. Baldwin's mother had died around 1850. T.N. Baldwin was 12 when their father died, and J.R. and Margaret may have taken him in.


12 Apr 1861 (32) Civil War begins at Fort Sumter in South Carolina
23 Dec 1861 Birth of unnamed son in Poor Valley, Lee County, Virginia, according to transcription of Christening record. See Margaret Baldwin's children (above) for particulars.
Mar 1862 (33) Surmised conception of Newton Bascum Baldwin.
Jun-Aug 1862 (33) Union forces capture, hold, then give up Cumberland Gap -- which the Union commander called the "American Gibraltar". The Union forces, far from Union supply lines, had to forage in what was mostly Confederate or Confederate-friendly territory. With the approach of superior Confederate forces intent on retaking the gap, the Union forces retreated, leaving the gap again in Confederate hands.
24 Dec 1862 (34) Birth of Newton Bascum Baldwin supposidly in Lee County, Virginia -- I have not seen any documentation. N.B. Baldwin appears to have been the last Baldwin-Howard child to be born in Virginia.
Jan-Jul 1863 (34) Conjectured window through which Baldwin-Howard family moves from Virginia to Owsley County, Kentucky.
Spring-Summer 1863 (34) Confederate forces from Lee County, Virginia, based at Camp Cumberland, raid and occupy "Mt. Pleasant" (Harlan), and engage in foraging activites.
July 1863 (34) Surmised conception of James Alfred Baldwin.
Jul-Aug 1863 (34) Civil War register of persons subject to military service places "John R. Balden" [sic] -- 34, White, Farmer, Married, Virginia-born -- in 6th Sub-District, Owsley County, Kentucky (see Civil War above).
Sep 1863 (34) Union forces occupy the railroad junction at Knoxville, Tennessee, on 2 Sep 1863, then compel inferior Confederate forces garrisoned at Gumberland Gap to unconditionally surrender on 9 Sep 1863. Cumberland Gap remains in Union hands for the rest of the war.
Oct 1863 (35) Union forces, having gained control of Cumberland Gap, used it as a gateway for mounting foraging expeditions and raids in Lee County, to obtain food, fodder, fuel, and other supplies, and to harrass Confederate forces.
Union forces burn the Lee County Court House in Jonesville, the county seat, in late October 1863.
Pro-Confederate elements in pro-Union Harlan burn Harlan's county court house in retaliation.

9 October or 9 December 1863 (35) William H. Moles, the husband of Nancy Ann (Markham) (Grubb) Moles, is captured by Union forces at Jonesville, marched to a prisoner-of-war camp in Louisville Kentucky, then sent to a camp for Confederate prisoners in Rock Island, Illinois, where he died of smallpox on 5 February 1864. See Private William H. Moles (below) for details.
Nov 1863 (35) In early November, Union forces in Jonesville set fire to a couple of other prominent buildings and "stole all the horses, cattle, grain and negroes they could find" (Brian D. McKnight, Contested Borderland, Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky, 2006, page 180).
2-3 & 28-29 Jan 1864 (35) 1st and 2nd Battles of Jonesville -- in which Confederate forces encounter Union forces in Lee County, in the vicinity of Jonesville, under a variety of conditions, which result in Union forces maintaing control of Cumberland Gap while Confederate forces have more control in Lee County, for the rest of the war.
23 Apr 1864 (35) Birth of James Alfred Baldwin -- supposidly in Owsley County -- his death certificate says only "Kentucky" and I have seen no other documentation. J.A. Baldwin is the first Baldwin-Howard child to be born in Kentucky.
Mar 1865 to Feb 1866 Period during which William "Will" Henley Baldwin (1856-1937), born in March 1856, is 9 years old -- when Story 2 claims how well he remembers the "terrible trek" in which Margaret "fled with her 5 children on foot through the Cumberland mountains" from Virginia to Kentucky. Story 2's characterization of Margaret's movements presents several problems (see discussion below).
9 Apr 1865 (36) Civil War ends at Appomattox in Virginia


[Fall] 1865 T.N. Baldwin finds J.R. Baldwin living on Big Raccoon Creek in Laurel county -- according to Story 1, the 1943 newspaper article memorializing T.N. Baldwin's life. However, according to Story 2, J.R. found his family "settled in Moore's Creek" -- which is generally associated with Jackson County.

"on foot through the Cumberland mountains"

Never mind that Raccoon Creek and Moore's Creek are close to each other. And never mind when Margaret and her brood of 5 or more children arrived there. Why would she have gone there? And what route did she take?

It is one thing for Margaret to "[flee] with her 5 young children on foot through the Cumberland Mountains" -- from, say, Lee County in Virginia to Harlan County in Kentucky, where she was born and raised and still had family. It is quite another thing for her to trek several times further east through several presumably unfamiliar counties -- with a brood of half a dozen children, the youngest an infant, the oldest 2 in their low teens.

It may seem wise that Margaret "buried their money and valuables" so as not to lose them to robbers. It is quite another thing to undertake a long journey with little or nothing to barter for food when the limited amounts she could have taken with her ran out.

Or did Margaret leave Lee County with the protection of a larger party of migrants? Militia were everywhere, foraging when not fighting. And civilians, to survive, did their best to stay out of the way and carry on their lives as usual. The war probably witnesed more travel than usual through the mountains that defined Kentucky's border with Virginia.

Cumberland Gap was under the control of either Confederate or Union forces throughout the war. Presumably, though, it was generally open to migrating families.

Harlan County at the time extended all the way south to Kentucky's border with Tennessee. It therefore included the Cumberland Gap area that Tennessee and Kentucky share with the larger Jonesville area in western Lee County in southewest Virginia.

Lee County Virginians and people migrating west through Lee County, who had no business in the town of Harlan or other localities in the northern reaches of Harlan County, or in Kentucky counties immediately to the north or northwest of Harlan, would probably have taken the southern route through Cumberland Gap to localities in, say, Clay or Laurel counties, and the southern parts of Jackson County -- presuming that troops garrisoned at Cumberland Gap, whether Union or Confederate, would not have prevented ordinary civilian traffic.

However, people in the Jonesville area of Lee County, when directly traveling to, say, Mancester, the seat of Clay County, or to Boonseville, the seat of Owsley County, would probably go northeast to Pennington Gap, then northwest through Harlan. Today, the roughly 115 miles on presentday roads from Jonesville to Booneville -- via Pennington Gap, Harlan, and Manchester -- would take about 2 hours and 15 minutes. Today, though, people today would probably drive to both Manchester -- and to McKee, the seat of Jackson County -- through Cumberland Gap and Pineville, turning north at Barbourville for Mancester, or continuing norhtwest to Corbin then north through London and Anneville to McKee.

The road from Manchester to McKee would then, as now, have passed a few miles east of Annville and through Gray Hawk, just northeast of Anneville.

Margaret was a probably a veteran border crosser. Margaret's older sister, Rebecca, was born in Harlan County, Kentucky (1850 census), but Margaret was born in Lee County, Virginia (1850 census). Rebecca, though, was partly raised in Lee County, where she settled with John R. Baldwin, who she may have married there. Shortly after Rebecca's death, Margaret married John R. Baldwin in Harlan but settled with him in Lee County.

John R. Baldwin mustered into the U.S. Army in 1848, for military service during the Mexican War, in Manchester in Clay County. He probably went to Manchester through Harlan, beginning his journey on the Jonesville-Harlan road. He mustered out at Newport in Campbell County, Kentucky, from which he might have returned home to Lee County in Virginia by any number of routes, first going to Lexington south of Newport, then from Lexington to Booneville and Harlan, or from Lexington to McKee, Manchester, and Harlan. Today he would drive south and east through Lexington and Richmond, then Berea and London skirting the west side of Jackson County, then Corbin and Pineville, to Middlesboro, then east through Cumberland Gap to Jonesville -- a 250-mile trip taking 4 hours if non-stop at top speeds. Longer and slower routes through Booneville and other towns to the east of Jackson County, and Harlan and Pennington Gap, would take well over 5 hours. In the mid-19th century, however one went to Jonesville from Newport would have taken a few days.

Margaret, born and raised in Lee County into the Howard-Mark family, with its strong Harlan ties, would probably have been familiar with the Jonesville-Harlan route but not with the Cumberland Gap or other southern routes.

See the 1863 map to right and other particulars below.

See The truth of the matter (below) for more about Baldwin-Howard itineraries.

Jan 1866 Surmised conception of Elihu Joseph Baldwin.
6 Oct 1886 Birth of Elihu Joseph Baldwin (1866-1942) in Laurel County -- according to "E.J. Baldwin" himself, on the Pittsburg, Laurel County death certificate for his son, "John Burnard Baldwin" (1925-1941), which E.J. Baldwin signed as the informant.
Feb 1867 Surmised conception of Henry Clay Baldwin.
5 Nov 1867 Birth of Henry Clay Baldwin (1867-1950) in Laurel County -- according to his death certificate, the "Informant" box of which is blank.
1870 census (41) Living with Margaret and 8 children in the Gray Hawk Post Office area of Sturgeon Precinct No. 6 in Jackson County, Kentucky (10 Jul 1870).
See John R. Baldwin's Mexican War time line for the chronology of his life from 1870 to 1909.

Top  


Story 3

Kentucky Confidential

He killed three men outside of war.
One over a horse.
One over a card game.
And one over a woman.

This has the classic feel of the opening of a good joke or tall tale. It's not that John R. Baldwin couldn't have killed a man or two or even three "outside of war" -- with impunity, no less. Anything is possible. It's just that, if he began a story like this about himself -- or if any of his children told a story like about him in this manner -- it was probably intended as a yarn that -- apart from its veracity, whether true or mostly true, or not even partly true -- is contrived to entertain people.

Variations in the other tellings of J.R. Baldwin "vendetta" tales also have "war story" or "folk lore" qualities like those seen in practically all "collective memory" about the past.

Writing everything down

"Too bad no one ever wrote the whole story down" is every family historian's lament. I recorded some of my maternal grandmother's stories on cassette tape in the 1970s. They are precious tales -- full of detail, and full of holes -- in her voice. Technology allows me to dub the tapes into electronic files the entire world could hear.

My mother began to write her stories down with a ballpoint pen on a legal pad. She began with her own birth on a homestead, which of course she had to create from the bits and pieces of all the stories she had heard from her parents and others who were there. I have the original handwritten draft with numerous handwritten edits. She was both a good writer and a good editor -- capable of improving her own story through judicious cutting and rewording. She finished only 2 paragraphs that spanned two pages. A 3rd paragraph had only 1 sentence -- "My mother, Ullie May (Hunter) Hardman was born in Missouri" -- abruptly ending with no period -- as though the phone had rung or a neighbor had knocked on the back door. But she left a fascinating diary covering her last years of high school and the year or so thereafter, up to the point she met my father. And my father saved 166 letters he received from her, 125 of them during their 2 or so years of courtship, in which she told many stories about her life at the time, including her teaching at a one-room country school (see The love letters of a schoolmarm (1935-1937) under "L. Orene Hardman's writings" on the Trailhead of this website.

I urged my father to write or record his stories -- and he could both tell stories and write when he wanted to -- but he rarely told stories about his life, and he never wrote about his childhood or youth. I kick myself now for not more aggressively interrogating both of my parents, but it's too late.

If Margaret Baldwin had been a writer

Writing everything down sounds like a good idea, until you consider what committing a story to paper implies. Fixing an oral story about any event robs the story of the life it would have if it were allowed to be passed along orally and aurally, mediated only by flawed and biased and creative human memories, down the generations, expanding and shrinking, changing a bit with each telling, spawning different versions as it makes its way down different branches of the family, forgotten in some, dimly remembered in others, eventually spilling into the seas of Ancestry.com boards and Facebook groups.

If Margaret Baldwin had been a diary or other running account of her fabled migration from Virginia to Kentucky, it would, of course, be fascinating reading -- whether told in a few pages or a book.

Whatever Margaret wrote, however, would have been only her version of the trek. Accompanying children old enough to remember it, or others who may have been traveling with her, would recall some things differently. They would tell their own stories. And their versions, transmitted by their children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren, would change a bit each time they were told -- as memories atrophy, elements from different mix, and imaginations run wild like in dreams.

Once written or otherwise recorded, a story achieves the status of a "documentary" or "factual" or "official" account" -- a "testimony" or "deposition" of sorts.

There are fascinating studies of how oral traditions, within just the past two centuries, spanning the 19th and 20th centuries, have resulted in multiple accounts of events that surely happened -- but not necessarily in the ways, or for the reasons, that story tellers claim.

Top  


The burning of Harlan Court House

Alessandro Portelli -- in Chapter 3 ("Wars and Peace") of They Say in Harlan County: An Oral History (New York: Oxford University Press, 2010) -- makes the following observation about the various accounts of the burning of the court house in Harlan during the Civil War (page 56, [bracketed] and (parenthetic) remarks and unbracketed ellipses . . . are Portelli's, underscoring and highlighting, and bracketed elipses < . . . >, are mine.

Berrigan 1949-05 Alessandro Portelli
They Say in Harlan County: An Oral History
Oxford University Press, 2010, 2011, 2012
Yosha Bunko Scan

"The courthouse was burned [by the Confederates] during the Civil War in Harlan; so, I guess there's a lot of history here that I don't know about" (Chester Napier). As in most of these war narratives, memories are uncertain and plural: some say it was burned by Confederate troops in retaliation for the burning of the Lee County, Virginia, courthouse, others that it was an irregular guerrilla band.15 Others still blamed "Devil Jim" Turner.

MILDRED SHACKLEFORD: My dad's mother's grandfather's name was Devil Jim Turner. Did you hear of him? He was a mean old man. According to what my grandfather told me, he was supposed to have killed twenty-two people in his lifetime. He died at the age of ninety-one and he was buried in the state of Washington because he moved out there when life got too tough for him. < . . . > Although Devil Jim Turner was a real person and famous in Harlan, this story is about 95 percent fiction.... My grandfather was very good with a tale."

Throughout his book, Portelli (b1942), an Italian scholar of American literature and culture and an oral historian, cites variations of stories people tell about events in Harlan County to dramatize the way families and communities construct collective memories. Portelli pioneered the study of the role of memory in history, and the development of oral history as a research methodology. His book on Harlan County explores how people "remember" various incidents in Harlan County in the form of stereotypes that simplify, distort, or even ignore facts.

Murder, mayhem, and hollow logs

Regarding the legends that surround James "Devil Jim" Turner (1838-1909), Portelli goes on to cite this story (page 57).

Devil Jim gathered a guerrilla company on the Union side "and kept up a regular system of murder, robbery and horse stealing throughout the war, southern men being the principal sufferers." Family narratives and oral histories feed into electronic memory. According to a genealogy site, Devil Jim and his gang killed William Middleton in 1869. His widow testified that Jim Turner, his brother William, and Francis Pace had killed William Middleton's brother David. However, they could not be tried because the key witness for the prosecution was killed on Harlan's Main Street. [Note 16] Another Web page reports that on his return from the war Middleton was captured by a gang, tortured, and killed, and his dismembered body was hidden in a hollow log in Devil's Den on Stone Mountain. [Note 17]

"During the Civil War," Fred Napier recalled, "there was a robber, and he'd come through here and he'd take people's money and stuff. He shot one of my dad's [relatives], shot him square through the [head] with an old rifle gun." Some of the victim's relatives traced the robber in Virginia: "They brought him right down here on this creek, they killed him, they cut a piece off of him at a time. Ears, nose, tongue, punched his eyes out. So they killed him and hid him." These may have been the bones that Fred Napier's ancestors found later, on the Martin's Fork side of Stone Mountain. [Note 18]

In 1874, Devil Jim and his accomplices were sentenced to life in prison for the murder of William Middleton. Freed on parole in 1890, he moved to Washington state, where he died in 1909. [Note 19]

Portelli regards such living memories "partly mythologized, but full of meaning" (page 4). I take this to mean that -- never mind the factuality of a story passed down in a family, and how it might change from generation to generation -- the fact that it is both remembered and conveyed has meaning for the tellers, and for the told who become tellers.

James Turner's demise

A Find a Grave memorial for a "James Turner" states that he is buried in Toledo Cemetery, Toledo, in Lewis County, Washington. The memorial shows images of both an erect tombstone and a flat headstone. The tombstone has the following inscriptions.

Born Aug 15, 1836
Died March 10, 1910
Co. D 49th Ky Inf
Gone But Not Forgotten

The memorial shows a photograph of Turner in what appears to the blouse of a U.S. Civil War Union uniform. It also shows the following transcription of an obituary attributed to "The Morning Oregonian, March 9, 1910, page 2" by its poster .

BURNS KILL AGED MAN

PARALYTIC FALLS ON STOVE, CLOTHES CATCHING FIRE

Little Grandson Finds Victim Lying on Floor and Has to Run Mile for Aid.

CASTLE ROCK, Wash., Wash., March 8,-- (Special) -- Alone, feeble, unable to help himself, James Turner, an aged man, who resided on a farm near Toledo, in Lewis County, slowly burned to death last Saturday morning, and the cause of his terrible ending will probably always remain a mystery.

He is said to have been partly paralyzed, and it is possible that he might have fallen on the stove and thus set his clothes on fire. He was found by his grandson sometime Saturday morning, lying on the floor, with his clothes on fire.

The grandson was too much frightened to render his grandparent any assistance, but instead ran home and notified his father, who is himself old and crippled, and he sent the boy after another brother, who resided nearly a mile farther away. By the time this son arrived the poor man old man was too badly burned to give any account of the accident, and though everything that could be thought of was done for him, he passed away next morning, after terrible suffering.

The funeral took place Monday, and was largely attended, Mr. Turner being known all over the region, where he had lived for many years, coming from Kentucky, where he was also well and widely known. He leaves several sons to mourn his loss.

Despite the 5 March 1910 date on the grave markers, many Ancestor.com family trees -- like the account reported in Portelli's book -- state that he died on 5 March 1909. However, the "Saturday" on which he is stated to have died in the obituary corresponds to 5 March 1910. A Washington death index gives his father's name as "James Turner" and his mother's name as "Betsy Cley".

The 1850 census shows "James" (13) living with his parents -- "James Turner" (45) and "Elizabeth" (40) -- and 6 siblings in District No. 1 of Harlan County. "Elizabeth "Betsy" Ann Clay" (1810-1876) married "James Brittain Turner" (1805-1860) in Harlan County on 14 October 1833.

The 1860 census shows "James Turner" (22) farming in the "Harlan Postoffice" area of Harlan County, with his wife "Sarah" (22) performing "household duties", and three children -- "Hiram" (5), "James" (3), and "Rachel" (1).

The 1870 census shows "James Turner" (33) living in the Mt. Pleasant Post Office area of District No. 1 of Harlan County farming with his wife Sarah (34) and 5 children including. "Hiram" (15) is a farm laborer.

Top  

Story 1 Thomas N. Baldwin in Confederate service
Look back at life John R. Baldwin's brother Thomas Newton Baldwin
Unsourced 1943 article from Kentucky newsp
Shared by BJ Baldwin Rudder circa 2018
Baldwin stories
Confederate 50-dollar bill For a dinner of "fat meat and grease and black coffee"
The Confederate States of America, Fifty Dollars
Printed in Richmond, Sept. 2nd, 1861
"Six Months after the Ratification of a Treaty of Peace
between the Confederate States and the United States"
Confederate notes promised payment to the bearer
after a stipulated period of months or years after the date of the note
or, in the case of this optimistic early note,
the conclusion of a peace treaty

However, during the war, confidence in victory dropped, and prices inflated,
to the point that, by the end of the war, a $50 Confederate note might buy
a bar of soap -- if you could talk someone into accepting it
Copped and cropped from eBay
Thomas Baldwin Thomas Newton Baldwin's Commonweath of Kentucky Certificate of Death
10 March 1924, McWhorter Voting Precinct, Laurel County
Copped, cropped, and compressed from FamilySearch
Elizabeth Baldwin Carrier Susong Elizabeth (Baldwin) Susong's Commonweath of Virginia Certificate of Death
19 May 1951, Wheeler, Rose Hill Magisterial District, Lee County
Copped, cropped, and resized from Ancestry.com
Story 2 John R. Baldwin in Union service
Margaret Baldwin's exodus from Virginia to Kentucky during Civil War
John R. Baldwin's postbellum vendetta against men who destroyed his home

Scan of page from unsourced family history
Shared by BJ Baldwin Rudder circa 2017
Attributed to "cousin out west"
Baldwin stories
1863 Kentucky map Jonesville-Spurlock road and Martins Creek
"Walnut Hill" east of Cumberland Gap southeast of Jonesville
As shown on "Lloyd's Official Map of the State of Kentucky"
James T. Lloyd, New York, 1863
Crop from a high resolution scan downloaded from Library of Congress

Place names then and now
"Spurlock" was the contemporary name of "Harlan", the seat of Harlan County in Kentucky, during the Civil War. "Harlan County" included what later became Bell County, hence extended southwest to Kentucky's border with Tennessee and Virginia at Cumberland Gap. "Martins Creek" is known today as "Martins Fork", which joins Clover Fork at Harlan. The two streams join Poor Fork, and the three streams become the Cumberland River at Baxter, just west of Harlan. The 1873 map shows "Poor Fork Cumberland River". The unlabled stream south of the Black Mountains is Clover Fork. Presentday U.S. Route 421 picks up and follows Martins Fork to Harlan from its headwaters near Cawood about halfway between Pennington Gap and Harlan.

Old and new Harlan roads
Maps today show the road to Harlan beginning from Pennington Gap, a few miles northeast of Jonesville. Present-day Jonesville maps show an "Old Harlan Road" -- aka "58 State Road T-650" -- heading north off U.S. Route 58 right in the middle of where Route 58 becomes Jonesville's main street, between Pennington Gap and Cumberland Gap. Northbound U.S. Route 421, after crossing U.S. 58 in the southern oustskirts of Pennington Gap, is called "Harlan Road" -- and "New Harlan Road" after it passes through Pennington Gap, on the northern outskirts of which it crosses first Left (west) Poor Valley Road then Right (east) Poor Valley Road. Circa 1859-1861 records show John R. and Margaret Baldwin in Poor Valley. The 1860 census shows them in the "Jonesville Post Office" area. Pennington Gap did not have a Post Office until 1891.

1911 Lee County map Click on image to enlarge
Lee County 50 years after Civil War
The many settlements between Cumberland Gap and Jonesville
Crop from 1911 Rand McNally map of Virginia copped from
My Genealogy Hound, which see for many similar resources
Story 3 John R. Baldwin kills 3 men outside of war
"One over a card game, one over a horse, and one over a woman"
The man he killed over a horse was named Middleton

Another story says that John R. Baldwin's Howard brother-in-law
killed a man named Middleton and fled

Two other stories involve John R. Baldwin's gun and powder,
and his finding of lead that could be rolled into bullets
Screen capture of stories as posted on Baldwin Genealogy
by BJ Baldwin Rudder on 29 November 2018,
as told by her, and variously attributed
to her father (J.R. Baldwin's grandson),
who heard them her grandfather (J.R. Baldwin's son),
who apparently heard them from his father J.R. Baldwin,
and to a cousin and herself
Baldwin stories
Report 1 Owsley County, Kentucky, during Civil War
Led Kentucky counties in percent of 1860 voters who
"enrolled in Union Army" (13 percent)

Image from page 59 of 72 page report dated 2000
The Paper Trail Of the Civil War In Kentucky 1861-1865
compiled by Colonel (Ret.) Ar-mando "Al" Alfaro
as part of a book in progress slated for publication in 2006
by Col (R) Armando "Al" Jesus Alfaro (1927-2009)
Screen captured from Kentucky National Guard eMuseum
Owsley County
Report 2 Harlan County, Kentucky, during Civil War
Home of the headwaters of the Cumberland River
in the heart of Kentucky's Eastern Coalfield

Image from page 34 of 72 page report dated 2000
The Paper Trail Of the Civil War In Kentucky 1861-1865
compiled by Colonel (Ret.) Ar-mando "Al" Alfaro
as part of a book in progress slated for publication in 2006
by Col (R) Armando "Al" Jesus Alfaro (1927-2009)
Screen captured from Kentucky National Guard eMuseum
Harlan
Report 3 1st Battle of Jonesville, 2-3 January 1863
All roads pass through Jonesville
Lee County, Virginia, during the Civil War
Image copped from Col. Ben E. Caudill Camp No. 1629
13th Kentucky Cavalry, C.S.A.: "Caudill's Army"
Whitesburg (KY): Col. Ben E. Caudill Camp No. 1629, 2013, page 39
Jonesville
Report 4 Civil War in Southwestern Virginia
Foraging and skirmishes involving Union forces at Cumberland Gap and Confederate forces around Jonesville made life in Lee County difficult

The following paragraphs and figure are copyrighted © 2017 by Martha Grace Lowry Mize, who reserves all rights. They are cited from the Civil War in Southwestern Virginia chapter of The Lee County Story, the community web version of the longer academic pdf edition of History and Heritage Made Accessible: The Lee County, Virginia Story, an undergraduate sociology and anthropology thesis Mize submitted at The University of Mississippi in 2017.

The Lee County Story

Civil War in Southwestern Virginia

By Martha Grace Lowry Mize

Despite the lack of rail lines in the county, the war placed Lee County in both a significant and dangerous position. Lee County bordered both Union (neutral) Kentucky and Union-leaning east Tennessee, and was geographically close to the new Union state of West Virginia. This situation made southwest Virginia a skirmish and raiding locale. The Cumberland Gap was a significant investment as a gateway to Tennessee and Kentucky for both sides.

The first attempt to take Cumberland Gap was by Union troops led by General George W. Morgan in June 1862 (Luckett 1964:314). Luckett (1964:314) states that "Morgan who had already pushed through Rogers' and Big Creek gaps occupied Cumberland Gap June 18, 1862, reporting that, 'after two weeks of maneuvering we have taken the American Gibraltar without the loss of a single man.[']" Union control did not last, and the Confederacy regained control in September after General Morgan disregarded Union orders and retreated (Luckett 1964:315). General Morgan's retreat allowed for the easy reoccupation of Cumberland Gap by Confederate troops (Luckett 1964:315).

The second battle of Cumberland Gap can be described as a bloodless fiasco for the Confederacy. The Virginia 64th , under the leadership of Colonel Campbell Slemp, fought under General John W. Frazer with the 5th Tennessee Brigade (Weaver 1992) (Luckett 1964:316). Union Major General Ambrose E. Burnside, surrounded the Gap and outnumbered Confederate forces three to one between September 7-9, 1863 which allowed him to capture the Gap in a bloodless surrender. According to Luckett (1965:316) Frazer surrendered "approximately 2,200 men and twelve pieces of field artillery." Union forces maintained control of the Cumberland Gap for the remainder of the war.

Union occupation in Lee County did not necessarily preclude total control of the county. Cumberland Gap geographically resides a few hundred yards east, in Tennessee with the closest resources available located in Lee County (Middlesboro, Kentucky was not established until 1890). Incursions into Lee County were common and Union raiding parties often replenished supplies from Lee County residents, which included willing and unwilling supporters of the Union. One such incursion resulted in the burning of the Lee County courthouse. In late October 1863 a Union force pushed west from the Gap to Jonesville. The county clerk at the time had removed the records to an isolated farm house (McKnight 2006:180). The Union occupation of Jonesville triggered events that led to the Battle of Jonesville. Pridemore, a resident of Scott County, had lost too many men to protect the county from raiding parties and reported his lack of supplies, men, and resources faced with the occupation of Jonesville to Colonel Giltner (McKnight 2006:181). The loss of Pridemore's men was in no small part due to ambushes of Union soldiers arranged by various county residents with Union sentiments (McKnight 2006:181). Giltner, Slemp, and Pridemore's combined forces at Jonesville with Slemp's, and "the Confederates succeeded in capturing an estimated 450 Union Soldiers near Jonesville during the first week of 1864" (McKnight 2006:181). The Confederate victory in Jonesville secured Confederate control in Lee County for the remainder of the war. Tensions were high in the area as Union forces controlled Cumberland Gap and Confederate forces controlled Jonesville. The proximity of these two areas likely made life in Lee County difficult for the remainder of the war (Figure 1).

Mize Lee County

Figure 1: Sketch of Lee County, Virginia


The truth of the matter

Beating the assertions of Stories 1 and 2 against the known or surmised benchmarks in the lives of John R. Baldwin and the Howard sisters, and their children, around the time of the Civil War, is to enter a quagmire in a maze. There is no getting out. The only "truth" -- at this point -- is that we simply don't know what happened. the Given the paucity of documentary evidence, and the lack of 1st or even 2nd person accounts, we have a

5, 6, or 7 children?

1961-1962, 1962-1964, 1964-1966?

The 1860 census for Lee County, Virginia, shows 5 Baldwin-Howard children -- "Elisabeth L." 10 and "John M." 8 (Rebecca's children), and "Mary E. D." 7, "Wm. H." 4, and "Robbert E." 3 (Margaret's children).

The 1870 census for the Gray Hawk Post Office area of Sturgeon Precinct No. 6 in Jackson County, Kentucky, enumerates 8 Baldwin-Howard children. Only 1 of the 5 children on the 1860 census is not listed the 1870 census -- Elizabeth Letitia Baldwin (1849-1930), who was 19 when she married Jesse Milburn Taylor on 13 January 1870, 6 months before the 1870 census. If Elizabeth was one of brood of 5 children with Margaret when she "fled" to Kentucky, then the flight would have had to be before the birth of N.B. Baldwin in Dec. 1862.

But wait.
N.B. Baldwin was born in Virginia. So Margaret must have left Virginia after he was born -- and before the birth of J.A. Baldwin in April 1864. Which means she made the journey sometime between January 1963 and March 1864 with 6 children -- when W.H. Baldwin was 7 or 8 years old.

But again, wait.
In July-August 1863, John R. Baldwin was enumerated in Owsley County, Kentucky, as a Class 1 male subject to military service in the Union. Was Margaret not with him then? For July 1863 was when J.A. Baldwin, born in April 1864, was probably conceived. If Margaret and the children were already in Kentucky when John R. was registered on a Union military service eligibility roll, then the window for the migration of the Baldwin-Howard family from Virginia to Kentucky shrinks to between about January and June 1863.

What do these observations imply about Baldwin-Howard family movements?
J.R. had to have been with Margaret when N.B. and J.A. were conceived around March 1862 and July 1863. Could he have been "in Union service" during the year or so between these dates? Did he enlist somewhere in a Union regiment after conceiving the future N.B. Baldwin around March 1862? Then return to Virginia a year later, either after mustering out, or on furlough if not away without leave, to find Margaret gone -- then catch up with her in Owsley county, to see N.B. for the first time and sire the future J.A. -- then submit to enrollement in a Union eligibility register in which the former military service box is blank?

Assuming that his July-August 1863 Owsley county enrollment as a Class 1 male subject to military service was voluntary and reflects his political sentiments -- could John R. Baldwin have been away from his home in Virginia for a period of time before this enrollment, during which Margaret had to flee Lee County?

Or, after N.B.'s birth, did John R. Baldwin conclude that, with all the fighting over Cumberland Gap, and the forages and battles in his own back yard, Lee County had become too dangerous -- and decide to move his family to Owsley County?

Top  


"on foot through the Cumberland Mountains"

Margaret Howard was born and raised in Harlan County, Kentucky, and she and John R. Baldwin married in Harlan in 1855.

John's 3 children with Margaret's older sister Rebecca appear to have been born in Virginia. But one imagines them growing up with some awareness of their Howard relatives in Harlan -- on the other side of the Cumberalnds.

Elizabeth L. Baldwin, oldest of the Baldwin-Howard siblings, born in 1849, married Jesse M. Taylor, a native of Harlan in 1870, in Harlan, and they were living in Harlan as late as 1880. Was Elizabeth left in Harlan when the Baldwin-Howard family moved from Virginia to Kentucky during the Civil War? Or did she accompany her younger siblings to Owsley, Laurel, and possibly even Jackson counties before she married? Elizabeth and Jesse are in Raccoon, in Laurel County, from the 1900 census, and are buried in London, the seat of Laurel County. See 10.1 Elizabeth Letitia Baldwin and Jesse Milburn Taylor in the Baldwin-Howard family galleries section for details.

Margaret, with or without John R., had probably made the trip over the Cumberlands a few times in the course of her life to that point, visiting Howard relatives in Harlan while living in Lee. "Lloyd's Official Map of the State of Kentucky" -- dated 1863 -- shows a road leading directly from Jonesville in Lee County, Virginia, to Spurlock, as the town of Harlan had been named at the time. The map is a bit skimpy, and is generally more schematic that precise. It shows the Jonesville-Spurlock route follows Martins Creek [Martins Fork].

On U.S. Route 421 today, the distance between Pennington Gap in Lee County, and Harlan in Harlan County, is roughly 25 miles or 30 minutes by car. The route itself is not that different than it was in the 1860s. Then, of course, the roads would have been narrower and unpaved, rutted and rocky in places -- and probably not as safe, given the war and civil unrest on both sides of the Cumberlands.

R. Ray Ortensie, U.S. Air Force, Valdosta, Georgia, wrote this a review of Brian D. McKnight, Contested Borderland: The Civil War in Appalachian Kentucky and Virginia, Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2006.

"Gurillas have nearly laid waste to the country by pillaging, plundering, and robbing and are all well armed and men of the worst character" (p. 227). These were the sentiments of an unknown citizen of Harlan County, Kentucky, during the Civil War, who added that the local sheriff was "powerless against these men" (p. 229). Brian McKnight's work, Contested Borderland: The Civil War in Appalachian Kentucky and Virginia, describes in great detail the struggle for this sparsely populated but mineral rich geographical area that both Northern and Southern armies sought to control throughout the war. The area was literally ripped apart by the contesting armies, allowing ruffians to ravage the area with little resistance.

Cited from The Journal of Military History, Society for Military History, Volume 70, Number 4, October 2006, pages 1132-1133, which see for full review.

Top  

Chronology of Baldwin-Steele family

5. Newton Bascom Baldwin and Martha Ellen Steele

The Baldwin-Steele family descends from at least England, Scotland, Ireland, and France through several American colonies and territories including New York (NY), Massachusetts (MA), Virginia (VA), Tennessee (TN), and Kentucky (KY).

Baldwin line down to Baldwin-Steele union

The Baldwin line seems to have migrated from Ireland to Virginia in the late 18th century. The following reconstruction is based and various reports of very uneven quality. Only information from John R. Baldwin on down has benefited from inspection of census and other civil records.

The smaller 1st number represents the ancestral generation "n" counted back in time from my own generation taken as n = 0. Accordingly, my parents are n = 1 (1. Wetherall-Hardman), their parents are n = 2 (including 2. Wetherall-Baldwin), and their grandparents are n = 3 (including 5. Baldwin-Steele).

The larger 2nd number represents the family number counting from the union of my parents (1. Wetherall-Hardman). These numbers are the basis for the numbers assigned all family tables on this website. See the Wetherall families section of the "Wetherall family history" page on this website for a table showing how this numbering scheme works for 6 ancestral generations of the Wetherall-Hardman family.

  1. 160. Baldwin-Gore
    John Baldwin (1721-1791)
    Born 11 Apr 1721, Thorpe, Morieux, Suffolk, England
    Died 13 Jan 1791, Brent Eleigh, Suffolk, England
    Mary Ann Gore (1725-1798)
    Born 1725 in Suffolk, Alpheton, England
    Died 1798 in Suffolk, Brent Eleigh, England
  2. 80. Baldwin-Ferrel
    James Baldwin (1752-1798)
    Born 1752 in Kilkenny, Kilkenny, Ireland
    Died 19 Nov 1798, Wythe, Tazewell County, Virginia
    Elizabeth Ferrell (1752-1835)
    Born September 1752 in Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
    Died 22 March 1835, Sneedville, Hamilton, Tennessee, USA Migrated from Ireland to Virginia and married nlt 1772.
    Whether they married before or after they migrated is unknown.
  3. 40. Baldwin-Newberry
    John Baldwin (1772-1830)
    Born 1772, Bedford, Montgomery County, Virginia
    Died 13 Feb 1830, Sneedville, Hancock County, Tennessee
    Elizabeth Newberry (1770-1825)
    Born 1770 Bedford, Montgomery County, Virginia
    Died 1825 Sneedville, Hancock County, Tennessee
    John Baldwin was the 3rd (4th) of 11 (12) children and the 1st of 3 sons.
  4. 20. Baldwin-Seale
    John Milton Baldwin (1792-1802 - ntl Nov 1855)
    Born 1792 or 1802 in Bedford, Montgomery County, Virginia
    Died nlt November 1855 in Lee County, Virginia
    Elizabeth Seale (abt 1808 - nlt 1858)
    Born about 1808 in Virginia
    Doed nlt 1858 in Lee County, Virginia
    Married about 1825 in Virginia
    John Milton Baldwin was the 1st of 11 children including 6 sons.
  5. 10. Baldwin-Howard
    John R. Baldwin (b 21 Sep 1828 VA, d 10 Mar 1909 KY)
    1st wife Rebecca Howard (b 31 Oct 1828 KY, d 3 Apr 1855 VA)
    2nd wife Margaret Howard (b 1 Dec 1835 KY, d 3 Jun 1912 KY)
    John R. Baldwin was the 2nd of 9 child and the 1st f 5 sons.
    He may have been a Methodist minister, but if so it was a part-time vocation, for all censuses show him as a farmer.

    Rebecca and Margaret were sisters. Rebecca had at least 3 children between 1849-1855. Margaret bore at least 11 and as many as 11 children between 1857-1880. She also raised Rebecca's 3 children. The 1900 census states that Margaret had 14 children of whom 11 survived. The 1910 census states she had 12 of whom 11 survived. A couple of the 14 children counted in the 1900 census may have been Rebecca's.
    In 2010 and 2011, when 99 and 100 years old, William B. Wetherall recalled from deep within his generally accurate memory that the names of his maternal great grandparents were John Baldwin and Margaret Howard, while those of his maternal great grandparents were Jonas Steele and Elizabeth Grubb. He had no family records of any kind other than his own birth certificate. While he said very little to us about his ancestors, he had clearly learned and remembered quite a bit about them from his relatives, most likely his grandmother Ellen Baldwin, his aunt Sadie Williams, and his cousin Faye Rebenstorf.
  6. 5. Baldwin-Steele
    Newton Bascum Baldwin (b 24 Dec 1862 VA, d 22 Mar 1919 ID)
    Martha Ellen Steele (b 14 Oct 1863 KY, d 27 Apr 1943 ID)
    Married 5 December 1880 probably in Jackson County, Kentucky.
    N. Bascum Baldwin was John R. Baldwin's 6th child and Margaret's 3th child assuming that John R. fathered 3 children with Rebecca and 11 with Margaret.

Steele line down to Baldwin-Steele union

See 4th cousins X removed: Steele-Grubb connections with David Crockett an account of the Steele line of the Steele-Grubb from which the Baldwin-Steele family partly descends, and the possible crossing of paths of the Steele line with an offshoot of the Crockett ancestors of Davy Crockett.

Baldwin-Steele family in 1860 to 1940 censuses
1860 1870 1880 1900 1910 1920 1925 1930 1940
Baldwin
N. Bascum
Born 1862 Sturgeon Pct 5
Graw Hawk PO
Jackson Cnty
Kentucky
Pond Creek
Precinct No 5
Jackson Cnty
Kentucky
Pond Creek
Jackson
Kentucky
St. Maries
Kootenai
Idaho
N. Bascum died in 1919. M. Ellen then lived in St. Maries, then in Nebraska, and then in St. Maries, in each place with a daughter.
Steele
M. Ellen
Born 1863 Jofields
Whitley
Kentucky
Pond Creek
Precinct No 5
Jackson Cnty
Kentucky
St. Maries
Benewah
Idaho
Utica
Seward
Nebraska
St. Maries
Benewah
Idaho

See 4th cousins X removed: Steele-Grubb connections with David Crockett for a look at the possible crossing of paths of the Steele line of the Baldwin-Steele family with an offshoot of the Crockett ancestors of Davy Crockett.

Baldwin-Steele chronology

1860 census for the Jonesville post office area of the Western District of Lee County, Virginia, shows "John R. Balwin" [sic = Baldwin] 31, Farmer, with his wife "Margret" [sic = Margaret] 22, Housekeeper, and 5 children -- "Elisabeth L." 10, "John M." 8, "Mary E. D." 7, "Wm. H." 4, and "Robbert E." 3 -- and John R. Baldwin's younger brother "Thos. N." 16, Farm labor. All are shown to have been born in Lee County in Virginia.

Elizabeth Letitia Baldwin (1849–1930), John Milton Baldwin (1851–1936), and Mary E. Baldwin (1853-1870) were John R. Baldwin's children with Rebecca (Howard) Baldwin (1828-1855).

William Henley Baldwin (1856–1937) and Robert E. Baldwin (1858–1942) were the first of at least 11 (possibly 12 or 14) children that John R. Baldwin would have with Margaret [Anne] (Howard) Baldwin (1835–1912), Rebecca's older sister. "Thos. N." is Thomas Newton Baldwin (b1843), John R. Baldwin's younger brother.

Newton Bascum Baldwin was born in Virginia on 24 December 1862, the 3rd child and son of John R. Baldwin (1828-1909), who was born in Virginia, with Margaret [Anne] (Howard) Baldwin (1835–1912), who was born in Kentucky.

Martha Ellen Steele was born on 14 October 1863 in Kentucky to a father born in Kentucky and a mother born in North Carolina (1880 census), though parents born in North Carolina.

Baldwins move from Virginia to Kentucky around 1863
The 1870 census shows all children up to and including "Newton B." (8) as having been born in Virginia, while all children from and including "James A." (6) were born in Kentucky. Newton Bascum Baldwin (1862-1919) was born on 24 December 1862, and James Alfred Baldwin (1864-1934) was born on 23 April 1864.

1870 census shows "Newton B. Baldwin" (8) living in Sturgeon Precinct No. 6 in Jackson County, Kentucky (Post Office: Gray Hawk) with his father John R. Baldwin (41), a farmer, his mother Margaret (35), keeping house, siblings John M. (18), Mary E. (17), William H. (14), Robert E. (12), James A. (6), Elihu J. (3), and Henry C. (2). James V. Howard (23) and Sarah E. Thomas (14) were also living with the family. John, William, and Robert were farm laborers. James V. Howard, probably Margaret's brother, was also a farm laborer. Sarah H. Thomas was a domestic servant. The household's real estate and personal property were valued at 400 and 250 dollars. Margaret and her youngest sons James A., Elihu, and Henry C. were born in Kentucky. All others in the household were born in Virginia. The two oldest children -- John M. (18) and Mary E. (17) -- are John R. Baldwin's children with his 1st wife, Rebecca (Howard) Baldwin (1828-1855), Margaret's deceased older sister.

1870 census shows "Martha E. Steele" (6) living in the household of Elisabeth [sic = Elizabeth] Steele (50), in which she is the youngest child, following George (23), James H. (21), Sarah H. (17), Nancy E. (15), John W. (12), and Mary J. (9). Elizabeth is a widow keeping house, while George and James are single farmers, and John is a farm hand. Elizabeth's place of birth is shown as "Va, Ky" as though she wasn't sure, while all the children are said to have been born in Kentucky. Elizabeth cannot write, while George, James, Nancy, and John can neither read nor right. George and James are "Male citizens of U.S. of ages 21 years and upwards".

1880 census shows "Newton B. Baldwin", age 19, living in Jackson County, Kentucky, apparently in Pond Creek, with his father John R. Baldwin 51, mother Margaret 44, and 8 younger siblings -- James A. 16, Elihur J. 13, Henry C. 12, Martha A. 9, George F. 7, Samuel L. B. 5, Archelus F. 3, and Charles N. 8/12. His father, himself, and all his brothers down to and including Henry, are laborers, presumably on the family farm. Margaret is keeping house.

As of 1880, John R. Baldwin had fathered at least 13 children, including 2 girls and 11 boys. In 1870, Newton B. was in the middle of the pack. In 1880 he was the oldest of those still at home.

1880 census shows "Martha E. Steele" (15) also living in what appears to be Pond Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky, with her mother Elizabeth Steele (59), and her brother John W. Steele (22). The Steele household is listed immediately after Baldwin household, on the same census sheet, so apparently the two families were neighbors. Elizabeth, widowed, is keeping house. John is a laborer, and Martha E. is at home.

Elizabeth, equivocally born in "Va, Ky" in the 1870 census, is reported in the 1880 census to have been born in North Carolina, while her father was born in Germany and her mother in Virginia. John and Martha (Ellen) were said to have been born in Kentucky, their father in Kentucky, and their mother in North Carolina.

1880-1882   The 1880 census was enumerated on 2 June. Some reports claim that N. Bascum and M. Ellen married on 5 December that year. However, the 1900 and 1910 censuses record that they had been married respectively 18 and 28 years, which implies they had married in 1882, the year before their first daughter, Sadie, was born.

Between 1883 and 1890, Bascum and Ellen had 4 daughters, all born in Kentucky. Their youngest daughter, Ida Mae Baldwin, would marry William Riley Wetherall and give birth to William Bascum (later Bascom) Wetherall.

1890 census was destroyed in a fire.

1900 census shows "N?? B. Baldwin" (38), born December 1861, head of household, with his wife Ellen (36), born October 1863. Both have been married 18 years, and she has had 4 children of whom 4 survived -- namely, the 4 daughters listed in this census -- Sa??y (Saddy? Sally?) [sic = Sadie, Sada] (17), born August 1883, Liddie [sic = Lydie, Lydia] (14), born April 1886, Almedie [sic = Meda] (11), born December 1888, and Ida (9), born March 1891. N.B. was engaged in farming, and all the girls were at school.

The same enumeration sheet shows two related Baldwin-Howard families -- (1) N.B.'s parents, John R. and Margaret Baldwin, and his 6th younger brother, their 7th (John's 8th) son, Arch Baldwin, and (2) N.B.'s 4th younger brother, George, and his family. The three Baldwin-Steele families are grouped together, as though they were living on neighboring farms or were farming the same land. The fertility figures on the 1900 census state that Margaret had given birth to 14 children of whom 11 survived. John R. died in 1909, after which Margaret would live with a grandson next door to the families of two other sons. See 1910 census (below) and "Neighboring Baldwin families in 1900 and 1910 censuses" (above) for fuller details.

1904 seems to have been the year that Bascum and Ellen Baldwin uprooted their family from Kentucky and began the westward wanderings that took them through at least Nebraska and Washington before settling in Idaho around 1910. In the early 1980s, their granddaughter Lennie Lee Anstine wrote an autobiographical account of the Anstine family in which she said that her mother, Lydia (Baldwin) Anstine, Bascum and Ellen's 2nd daughter, born in Kentucky in 1886, had left Kentucky when she was 18 -- ergo 1904.

1905 Kansas census for Parsons, in Labette County, enumerated on 1 March 1905, shows "N.B. Baldwin" (44), residing in a home with "C.F. Williams" (28), "Sallie Williams" (22), and "Oscar Williams" (6). C.F. Williams and N.B. Baldwin were born in Virginia, and Sallie and Oscar were born in Kentucky. C.F. Williams came to Kansas from Tennessee, while Sallie and Oscar Williams, and N.B. Baldwin, came to Kansas from Kentucky. C.F. Williams is described as a "Hospital attendant".

1907 Lincoln, Nebraska directory shows "Ellen Baldwin" and "Neuton B. Baldwin" [sic = Newton] both working and residing at the "Asylum" -- i.e., the Nebraska Hospital for the Insane -- he as a "meat cutter", she as an "asst cook". Lennie Anstine's account says that Lydia met Charley in Lincoln, where she was attending business school. Apparently they were living at the same boarding house.

1908 Spokane, Washington directory shows "Newton B Baldwin" working at a "restaurant" at 914 1st Avenue and residing at 907 1/2 1st Avenue. The "Restaurants" section of the classifieds shows a "N B Baldwin" at 914 1st Avenue. The same directory shows "Ida M Baldwin" as a student at "N W Business College" boarding at 1222 Sprague Avenue. There are many Baldwin's in the directory, including a "Madge Baldwin", a student at the same college, boarding at the same address. "Madge" may well be a corruption of "Meda".

1909 Spokane, Washington directory shows "Newton B Baldwin" working at a "restaurant" at 914 1st Avenue and residing at 921 1st Avenue. The "Restaurants" section of the classifieds show "N B Baldwin" at 914 1st Avenue. "Ida M Baldwin" is shown as a student at "Blair Bus Coll" boarding at 921 1st Avenue, which is Newton B. Baldwin's address. "Meda J Baldwin" is shown working as a "cashr" at "N B Baldwin" and residing at the same 921 1st Avenue.

Ida Mae Baldwin has transferred from North West Business College to its rival Blair Business College and moved in with her parents. Marge Baldwin is not listed in the 1909 directory. "Marge" may actually have been Ida's older sister "Meda" boarding with Ida and attending the same North West Business College.

1910 Spokane, Washington directory shows "Ida M Baldwin" boarding at Apartment J 1017 3rd Avenue. No place of work or study is shown. Neither her parents nor sister are listed.

1910 census shows "Newton B. Baldwin" (47), a restaurant keeper, and his wife Martha E. Baldwin (46), living on First Avenue in St. Maries, Kootenai County, Idaho. They had been married for 28 years in what was a 1st marriage for both, and she had had 4 children of whom all 4 survived. Residing with them were their daughters Meda J. Baldwin (21), single, a milliner working at her own shop and Sadie E. Williams (26), married for 6 years, no occupation, a granddaughter Fay [sic = Faye] M. Williams (3), and a grandson Claud [sic = Claude] J. Williams (2). Also listed as living in the Baldwin household were 12 boarders, ranging in age from 24 to 51, and working . The first listed boarder, a 48-year-old unmarried man who had immigrated from Germany in 1880 and since naturalized, was working as a dishwasher at a restaurant, most likely N.B. Baldwin's. The only female boarder was a 42-year-old childless widow, who was working as a teacher at a public school.

Sadie had 4 children of whom only Faye and Claude survived. That she had been married for 6 years suggests she had married around 1904 (the 1930 census reports her age as 46 and says she was 19 when first married, which implies she married in 1903). She is apparently already separated from their father, who was said to have been born in Tennessee. Faye was born in Iowa in 1906 and Claude was born in Nebraska in 1907.

The 1910 census for the 3rd Magisterial District of Jackson County, Kentucky shows N. Bascum Baldwin's mother Margaret living with the family of her grandson, Bradley Baldwin. Bradley is living next door to the families of two of Margaret's sons, H. Clay Baldwin (1867–1950) and Charley Baldwin (1878–1940). This census states that Margaret had borne 12 children of whom 11 survived. Margaret died in 1912. See "Neighboring Baldwin families in 1900 and 1910 censuses" (above) for fuller details about the neighboring Baldwin-Steele families in these censuses.

1911-1912 St. Maries, Idaho directory shows the following people related to the Baldwin's or their enterprises.

Abel John, clerk Baldwin & Thatch (page 186) [employee at grocery story]

Baldwin Mrs Ellen (page 186)
Baldwin Meda, b N B Baldwin [apparently an old listing for Meda]
Baldwin Newton B (Baldwin & Thatch)
Baldwin Samuel, employe [sic] Milwaukee Lumber Co [probably not related]
Baldwin & Thatch (N B Baldwin, G T Thatch), grocers [grocery story]

Ure Clifford M, barber (page 211) [listing for Meda after marriage]
Ure Meda, operator Interstate Telephone Co [Meda married]

Williams Mrs Sara E (page 212) [possibly an old listing for Sadie]

1914-1915 St. Maries, Idaho directory shows both Newton B. Baldwin (and parenthetically his wife Ellen), and also William R. Wetherall (and Ida M.), but no Clifford Ure or Sadie Williams.

Baldwin Newton B (Ellen), St Maries (page 70)
Wetherall William R (Ida M), printer St Maries Gazette, St Maries (page 325)

1916-1917 St. Maries, Idaho directory shows the following members of the Baldwin-Steele family.

Baldwin Newton B (Ellen), lab, $50, h 2004 Idaho av, St Maries (page 527)
Ure Clifford M (Meda) (Ure & Lawing), $525, h 1845 Main av, St Maries (page 599)
    The introduction to the directory explains that
    "Wife's name will be found in parenthesis [sic] following husband's name.
    Amount following name is assessed valuation of property, taken from County Assessor's List."

Wetherell [sic] William R (Ida M), printer St Maries Gazette, St Maries (page 602)
    The St. Maries Gazette was a local newspaper.
    An advertisement states that the company also did "Fine Job Printing".

Williams Sadie Mrs, chf opr Interstate Utilities Co, $1,050, St Maries (page 603)

William B. Wetherall was uncertain about the nature of his father's employment in St. Maries but assumed he had found work as a printer. He consistently reported that his mother had been in an asylum and not at home. The parenthetic inclusion of "Ida M." as William R. Wetherall's wife in the 1914-1915 and 1915-1917 directories give the impression that perhaps Ida was living at home. Perhaps William R. had her listed in order to create the impression that he had a wife and his son had a mother. It is not clear from the directory where William R. was living. William B. reported that he lived with his father in St. Maries but consistently spoke of being raised by his mother's family. Possibly William R. was living with the Baldwins.

N. Bascum Baldwin died on 22 March 1919 in St. Maries,

1920 census for St. Maries, Idaho shows the household of Clifford M. Yre [sic = Ure] (32), head, born in Iowa, Meda (31), wife, born in Kentucky, Greta A. (7 1/12), daughter, born in Idaho, and Ellen M. [sic = M. Ellen] Baldwin (56), mother, widowed, born in Kentucky. Clifford was working as a a US mail carrier at the post office. Meda and Ellen had no occupation. The family was living at 2004 in what was called the "Townsite Addition". "2004" is also the house number of the St. Maries home in which Ellen and Sadie were living in 1940 (see below).

Ida Mae (Baldwin) Wetherall, born in March 1891 in Jackson County, Kentucky, the youngest of the 4th and youngest Baldwin sister, died in North Idaho Sanitorium in Orofino in Clearwater County, Idaho, on 2 April 1923.

Lydia Margaret (Baldwin) Anstine, born on 1 April 1886 in Jackson County, Kentucky, the 2nd Baldwin sister, died on 31 August 1929 in Utica, Seward County, Nebraska.

1930 census shows Ellen Baldwin (66), widowed, in "E" Township of Seward County, Nebraska, as the mother-in-law of Charles Anstine (46), head, widowed, his daughters Lennie (20), Ora [sic = Aura] (18), and Imogene (3 6/12). Charles is a farmer, and Lennie and Aura are public school teachers. Charles was the husband of Ellen's 2nd daughter Lydia, who had died the year before after a 2-year bout with colon cancer. It appears that Ellen had been living with the Anstines to help care for Lydia and Imogene, who was born in 1926 shortly before Lydia's colostomy operation in 1927 and hence was still an infant. The 1930 census for "P" township in Seward County shows Sadie (46), divorced, residing and working at the Nebraska Industrial House, a home for unwed mothers. The census shows Sadie's daughter Faye Williams (23) as a teacher in Lincoln, Nebraska. Claude is also possibly living in Seward or Lincoln at the time.

1940 census shows "Sadie Williams" (57), divorced, living as head of household at 2004 Idaho Avenue in St. Maries, Benewah County, Idaho. She had been living in Spokane, Washington in 1935. Living with her is her mother, Ellen Baldwin (76), widowed, who had been living in the same St. Maries home in 1935. Sadie had completed 2 years of college, Ellen 8 years of grade school. Their home is valued at 600 dollars, and they own it free of mortgage.

M. Ellen Baldwin died in St. Maries on 27 April 1943.

Top  

Baldwin headstones Baldwin headstones

Left to rightJohn R. and Margaret Baldwin's tombstones
Wilson Cemetery, Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
Photographs by Dale Przybyl copped from Find a Grave

Baldwin headstones Baldwin headstones

Elizabeth and J.M. Taylor's headstones
A.R. Dyche Memorial Park, London, Laurel County, Kentucky
Photographs by Hank Cox copped from Find a Grave

John and Verena Baldwin

John Milton Baldwin (1851-1936) and Verena Marie McCoy (1864-1934) are buried as "Mother / Verena" and "Father / John" under a common Baldwin headstone in Meeteetse Cemetery in Meeteetse, Park County, Wyoming
Photograph by Eric Scott copped from
Find a Grave

Baldwin headstones

Robert, Lydia, and Eliza

Robert Ewing Baldwin married Lydia Lutitia Ketron, and after she died he married Eliza King. Lydia is buried in same cemetery as John R. and Margaret Baldwin. Robert and Eliza are buried in Eliza's family's cemetery.

Right
Lydia L. Baldwin's tombstone
Wilson Cemetery, Moores Creek
Jackson County, Kentucky
Photograph by Dale Przybyl copped from
Find a Grave

Below
Robert E. and Eliza K. Baldwin's headstones
King Cemetery, Peoples
Jackson County, Kentucky
Photographs by Peddle copped from
Find a Grave

Baldwin headstones
Baldwin headstones Baldwin headstones
Baldwin headstones Baldwin headstones

George F. and Emeline K. Baldwin's headstones
King Cemetery, Peoples, Jackson County, Kentucky
Photographs by Peddle copped from Find a Grave

Baldwin headstones Elihu J. and Mollie Baldwin's headstone
Davidson Cemetery, Peoples
Jackson County, Kentucky
Ancestry.com image posted by Elizabeth Loman




Henry Clay and Linda Baldwin's tombstone
Medlock Cemetery, Annville
Jackson County, Kentucky
Photograph by Janie Suggs Thatcher copped from
Find a Grave
Baldwin headstones
Baldwin headstones Martha Ann and Sam Moore's tombstone
Landrum Cemetery, London
Laurel County, Kentucky
Photograph by kyvictory copped from
Find a Grave
Baldwin headstones Arch and Martha Baldwin's tombstone
Wilson Cemetery, Moores Creek
Jackson County, Kentucky
Photograph by Dale Przybyl copped from
Find a Grave
Baldwin headstones Baldwin headstones

Charley N. and Grace L. Baldwin's headstones
Pilgrims Rest Cemetery, London, Laurel County, Kentucky
Photographs by P Renee T copped and resized from Find a Grave

Baldwin-Howard graves

William Bascom Wetherall's maternal-paternal great grandparents

John R. Baldwin and Margaret A. Howard, parents of N. Bascum Baldwin

N. Bascum Baldwin's father John R. Baldwin (1828-1909), and his mother Margaret (Howard) Baldwin (1835-1912), are buried at Wilson Cemetery in Moores Creek, which at the time of their deaths was in the Pond Creek voting precinct of Jackson County in Kentucky. The photographs shown to the right were taken by Dale Przybyl and posted on the Find a Grave website in 2010.

The inscriptions on their headstones are as follows.

REV. JOHN R. / BALDWIN
BORN / SEPT. 22, 1828
DIED / MAR. 10, 1909
[ Unread inscription ]
BALDWIN

MARGARET / BALDWIN
BORN / SEPT. 1, 1835
DIED / JUNE 3, 1912
Thy work is done,
thy trials (?) [ unread ]
BALDWIN

Margaret Baldwin's death certificate

Margaret Baldwin's death certificate shows the following particulars among others.

Margaret Baldwin
Female, White, Widow
Born: 1 December 1865, Lee County, Virginia
Died: 3 June 1912, Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
Age: 76 years, 6 months, 2 days
Occupation: House wife
Cause of death: Chronic valvular heart disease
Father: John Howard
Father's place of birth: Virginia
Mother's maiden name: Unknown
Mother's place of birth: Suppasadte, Virginia
Informant: A.F. Baldwin
Place of burial or removal: Moores Creek, Kentucky
Undertaker: James Baldwin
Date of burial: 4 June 1912


Major Baldwin-Howard graveyards

The graves of the Baldwin-Howard family are scattered in the following Kentucky, Wyoming, and Idaho graveyards. Most of the siblings and their spouses, though, are buried in Kentucky.

Wilson Cemetery (Kentucky)

Wilson Cemetery, in Moores Creek, near Annville in Jackson County, Kentucky, is the resting place of both John R. and Margaret Baldwin, and of Robert Baldwin's 1st wife Lydia Ketron.

Baldwin-Howard

John R. Baldwin (1828-1909)
Margaret (Howard) Baldwin (1835-1912)

Baldwin-Ketron

Lydia (Ketron) Baldwin (1858-1895)

A.R. Dyche Memorial Park (Kentucky)

A.R. Dyche Memorial Park is in London, Laurel County, Kentucky. It includes a "Taylor" family tombstone surrounded by several members of the extended Taylor family, Elizabeth Letitia (Baldwin) Taylor and her husband J.M. Taylor. Began as Parker family cemetery, then included some neighbors, then sold and renamed Pine Grove Cemetery, which passed through other hands until it assumed its present identity.

Taylor-Baldwin

Elizabeth Letitia (Baldwin) Taylor (1849-1930)
J.M. Taylor (1842-1934)

King Cemetery (Kentucky)

The Baldwin brothers Robert and Charles married respectively the King sisters Eliza and Emaline. All four are buried in separate graves in King Cemetery in Peoples, Jackson County, Kentucky, with several other members of the extended King family. Robert married Eliza after the death of his 1st wife Lydia Ketron (1858-1895), who is buried in nearby Wilson Cemetery.

Baldwin-King (Robert-Eliza)

Robert E. [Ewing] Baldwin (1858-1942)
Eliza K. [King] Baldwin (1873-1938)

Baldwin-King (George-Emeline)

George F. [Finley] Baldwin (1873-1946)
Emeline K. [King] Baldwin (1875-1961)

McGee Cemetery (Kentucky)

McGee Cemetery is a small family graveyard in Jackson County, Kentucky. Practically all of the fewer than 20 graves in the cemetery are of people named McGee. The few that are not McGees by name are former McGees or in-laws, such as Nancy Ann (McGee) Baldwin and her husband James A. Baldwin.

Baldwin-McGee

James Alfred Baldwin (1864-1954)
wife Nancy Ann (McGee) Baldwin (1873-1946)

See Baldwin-McGee graves.

Medlock Cemetery (Kentucky)

Medlock Cemetery, in Annville, Jackson County, Kentucky, includes the following Baldwin-Howard and Baldwin-McGee graves.

Baldwin-Abrams

Henry Clay Baldwin (1867-1950)
Linda (Abrams) Baldwin (1880-1950) (Henry's wife)

Baldwin-McGee children

Roy E. Baldwin (1906-1980)
wife Oma Mae (Shepherd) Baldwin (1909-1992)

Walter R. Baldwin (1910-1990)
wife Edith (Price) Baldwin (1919-2001)
son Lonnie L. Baldwin (1938-1967)

See Baldwin-McGee graves.

Meeteetse Cemetery (Wyoming)

Meeteetse Cemetery in Park County, Wyoming, is the resting place of John and Verena (McCoy) Baldwin.

Baldwin-McCoy

John Milton Baldwin (1851–1936) Verena Marie (McCoy) Baldwin (1864-1934)

Baldwin-McCoy children

The following Baldwin-McCoy children are also buried in Meeteetse Cemetery.

John Dwight Baldwin (1882-1942)
Robert Newton Baldwin (1888-1938)
William Harrison Baldwin (1891-1951)
Bertha Violet (Baldwin) Cogdill (1898–1978).

Woodlawn Cemetery (Idaho)

Woodlawn Cemetery, in St. Maries, Benewah County, Idaho, contains the following Baldwin-Steele graves, of N.B. Baldwin and M.E. Steele, their 3rd daughter Meda and her husband, and their 4th daughter Ida (my paternal grandmother).

Baldwin-Steele

N. Bascum Baldwin (1862-1919) M. Ellen Baldwin (1863-1943)

Baldwin-Steele children

The youngest 2 of the 4 Baldwin sisters are buried by their parents in the same plot.

Meda J. (Baldwin) Ure (1888-1971)
Clifford M. Ure (1887-1953)

Ida Baldwin Wetherall (1890-1923)

See Baldwin-Steele graves.

Top  

Baldwin headstones AboveBaldwin-Steele plot, circa 1970s
Woodlawn Cemetery, St. Maries, Idaho
General view centering on Baldwin tomb stone
from viewpoint of Ida's headstone in foreground.
The three headstones in front are those of Ida Wetherall Baldwin, Mother (Ellen), and Father (Bascum).
The two headstones in back are those of Clifford Ure and Meda (Baldwin) Ure (see below).
Wetherall Family photo
Right   Baldwin-Steele plot, 5 December 2018
Taken from front over headstone of "Mother" (M. Ellen Baldwin) in foreground
Photo by B.J. Baldwin Rudder
Baldwin headstone

Baldwin-Steele family headstones

Woodlawn Cemetery, St. Maries, Idaho

Note changes

During the roughly 40 years that have passed between the taking of the above two pictures, (1) The main "Baldwin" tombstone and the "Mother" headstone have settled a bit to the right, and (2) a tree can be seen immediately in front of the Ure (Meda Baldwin) graves behind the Baldwin tombstone.

Time line

N. Bascum Baldwin died in 1919, Ida Baldwin Wetherall in 1923, M. Ellen Baldwin (Mother) in 1943, Clifford M. Ure in 1953, and Meda J. (Baldwin) Ure in 1971. Presumably the plot was acquired either before or at the time of N.B.'s death with the rest of the family in mind. Only Sadie and Lydia, the oldest Baldwin sisters, are not buried in the plot -- Lydia, who died in 1929, because she settled in Utica, Nebraska, and is buried with her husband there, and Sadie, who died in 1964, because she lived mainly with her daughter Faye and son-in-law in nearby Coeur dAlene and is buried there, as later were they.

Right top  Front of Baldwin tomb stone
N. Bascum Baldwin (1862-1919)
M. Ellen Baldwin (1863-1943)
Photograph by Khat copped from Find a Grave

Right center  Ida Wetherall Baldwin headstone
Ida Mae (Baldwin) Wetherall (1890-1923)
Photograph by Khat copped from Find a Grave

Right bottom  Back of Baldwin tomb stone
Ure family of third Baldwin sister Almeda
Photograph by Khat copped from Find a Grave

Bottom  Ure-Baldwin headstones
Clifford Melvin Ure (1887-1953)
Almeda Jane (Baldwin) Ure (1888-1971)
Photographs by Khat copped from Find a Grave

Baldwin headstone
Ida Wetherall headstone
Ure headstone
Clifford Ure headstone Meda Ure headstone
Williams headstones Sadie (Baldwin) Williams's headstone
Coeur dAlene Memorial Gardens, Idaho
Photograph by Michael Young copped from
Find a Grave
Williams headstones Faye (Williams) Rebenstorf's headstone
Coeur dAlene Memorial Gardens, Idaho
Photograph by Michael Young copped from
Find a Grave

Claude J. Williams morturary plaque
Washington State Veterans Cemetery
Medical Lake, Spokane County, Washington
Photograph by David Luders
Find a Grave

CMI = Construction Mechanic 1st Class
USN = United States Navy

Find a Grave memorial note

In close collaboration with staff of Seattle's Lake View Cemetery, volunteers from the Missing In America Project found his unclaimed cremains; held in the cemetery's "Community Storage" vaults. After verification of his eligibility by the US Department of Veterans Affairs, based on his WW-II US Navy "Sea Bee" service, they picked up his cremains, arranged for a 130+ motorcycle escorted "Final Honors Ride" across the state to Medical Lake & interment with military honors at their "Forgotten Heroes Ceremony".

Laid to rest on 10 September 2019.

Claude Williams
Williams headstones Howard Rebenstorf's headstone
Coeur dAlene Memorial Gardens, Idaho
Photograph by Michael Young copped from
Find a Grave
Williams headstones Hattie Hel Rebenstorf's headstone
Monument Cemetery, Grant, Oregon
(Find a Grave photo)

Disrud family graves

Marilyn A. (Mathews) Disrud (1934-2013)
Riverview Cemetery, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho
Photograph by Michael Young copped from
Find a Grave
Williams headstones
Lydia and Charles headstone Lydia M. (Baldwin) Anstine (1886-1929)
Charles A. Anstine (1883-1932)
Utica Cemetery, Utica, Seward County, Nebraska
Photograph by weston04 copped from Find a Grave
Lennie Severns niches Lennie Lee (Anstine) Severns (1910-1997)
William A. Severns (1906-1991)
Claquato Cemetery, Chehalis
Lewis County, Washington
Photograph by Willie Dee copped from Find a Grave

Anstine family graves and columbarium niches

Anstine family graves

Velma Marie Anstine (1908-1919)
Utica Cemetery, Utica, Seward County, Nebraska
Photograph by weston04 copped from Find a Grave
Velma Anstine headstone

Lemmer family graves

Harlan Lemmer (1904-1985)
Greta Ava (Ure) Lemmer (1912-1999)
Hope Cemetery, East Hope, Idaho
(Find a Grave photo)
Lemmer-Ure headstone

Baldwin-Steele graves

William Bascom Wetherall's maternal grandparents

N. Bascum Baldwin and M. Ellen Steele, parents of Ida (Baldwin) Wetherall

The Baldwin-Steele plot of graves are in the original addition of Woodlawn Cemetery in St. Maries, in Benewah County in Idaho. The plot includes the graves of Bascum and Ellen (Steele) Baldwin, their 4th (youngest) daughter Ida (Baldwin) Wetherall, and their 3rd daughter Meda (Baldwin) Ure and her husband Clifford Ure.

Woodlawn Cemetery, St. Maries, Benewah County, Idaho
N. Bascum Baldwin (1862-1919)
M. Ellen Baldwin (1863-1943)
Ida Baldwin Wetherall (1890-1923)
Clifford M. Ure (1887-1953)
Meda J. Ure (1888-1971)

The general Baldwin tombstone in the middle of the plot is slightly tapered stone -- wider on top -- with an oval top. The face is engraved with the names of the Baldwin-Steel family's progenitors -- N. Bascum and M. Ellen Baldwin. Their headstones the "Mother" and "Father" headstones in front of general Baldwin tombstone.

The back of the general Baldwin tombstone is engraved "Ure" -- the family name of Clifford M. Ure, who was Bascum's and Ellen's son in law. Clifford was from St. Maries, and he and Meda continued to live in the town after they married in 1911 and they moved to Spokane no later than 1945.

Ida's son William B. Wetherall (1911-2013), this writer's father, was born in Iowa but raised by the Baldwins in St. Maries from the end of 1911 to 1917, when he began living with his paternal Wetherall-Beaman grandparents in Iowa. After graduating from high school, however, he moved back to St. Maries and lived with the Ure's while going to college and law school in Moscow.

After Bascum died in 1919, Ellen lived with all of her daughters except Ida, who died in 1923 at the state asylum in Orofino, where she had been committed for many years. Ellen lived with her 3rd daughter's Ure family, as well as with her 1st daughter Sadie Williams, who had also settled in St. Maries, during the period when WBW was going to college. She was living in Nebraska with her 2nd daughter, Lydia Anstine, when Lydia died in 1929. During the late 1920s, WBW worked summers on the Anstine farm.

The first three of the above graves are grouped together in the Baldwin family plot with the following inscriptions.

N. BASCUM BALDWIN / DEC. 24, 1862 / MAR. 22, 1919
M. ELLEN BALDWIN / 1863-1943
    Erect stone in center
IDA BALDWIN / WETHERALL / 1890-1923
    Flat stone, front left
MOTHER [Ellen]
    Flat stone, front center
FATHER [Bascum]
    Flat stone, front right

The Ure graves, in the back of the general Baldwin tombstone, have the following inscriptions.

CLIFFORD M. URE / 1887-1953
    Flat stone, back left
    Stone has a Masonic emblem
MEDA J. URE / 1888-1971
    Flat stone, back right

After Bascum Baldwin's death in 1919, Ellen lived for a while with her 3rd daughter Meda Ure and Clifford in St. Maries (1920 census). Ellen would have seen to the burial of her 4th daughter, Ida Wetherall, who died in Orofino, Idaho in 1923.

Ellen later lived with the family of her 2nd daughter Lydia Anstine in Nebraska, and she continued to live there for a while after Lydia's death in 1929 (1930 census).

The 1940 census shows Ellen living in St. Maries with her 1st daughter, Sadie Williams. Sadie and Meda would have seen to her burial after her death in 1943.

Meda and Clifford moved to Spokane no later than 1945. Their daughter Greta A. Lemmer and her family, and their son H. Dale Ure and his family, settled there no later than 1950. Presumably Meda saw to the burial of Clifford in Woodlawn Cemetery in 1953, and her children saw to her burial with him in 1971.

Some Ure and Lemmer descendants are still residing in Spokane, and presumably they are maintaining the Baldwin graves at Woodlawn Cemetery in St. Maries, in addition to the graves of their own immediate families.

Lemmer graves

Greta (Ure) Lemmer (1912-1999) and her husband Harlan Lemmer (1904-1985), both of whom died died in Spokane, where they had settled, are buried together in Hope Cemetery in East Hope, Bonner County, Idaho.

Woodlawn Cemetery

Woodlawn Cemetery was established in 1911 on the outskirts of St. Maries on land that was then part of Kootenai county, and the tombs which had been in a small cemetery within the city were moved to the new cemetery. The city and the cemetery are now part of Benewah county, which was created in 1915 from a part of Kootenai. The cemetery is now within the expanded city limits and is owned and managed by the city.

Williams graves

The Baldwin's 1st daughter, Sadie Williams, and her daughter Faye and son-in-law Howard, and their daughter Marilyn, are all buried in Coeur d'Alene, Kootenai County, Idaho cemeteries.

Coeur d'Alene Memorial Gardens Cemetery, Kootenai County, Idaho
Sadie E. Williams (1883-1864)
Faye M. Rebenstorf (1906-1995)
Howard Rebenstorf (1898-1966)

Monument Cemetery, Grant County, Oregon
Hattie Rebenstorf (1898-1966)

Riverview Cemetery, Coeur d'Alene, Kootenai County, Idaho
Marilyn A. Disrud (1934-2013)

The photographs of the above graves, shown to the right, were taken by Michael Young and posted on the Find a Grave website in 2013, with exception of Hattie Rebenstorf's grave, which was posted by "Pam R." in 2007. The inscriptions on their tombstones are as follows.

SADIE E. WILLIAMS / OUR MOTHER   GRANDMOTHER / 1883-1964

BELOVED MOTHER, GRANDMOTHER / AND GREAT GRANDMOTHER
FAYE M REBENSTORF / OCT 4 1906   NOV 25 1995
THEREFORE IF ANY MAN BE IN CHRIST / HE IS A NEW CREATURE   II COR 5:17

HOWARD C REBENSTORF / IDAHO
PFC   321 REPAIR UNIT MTC / WORLD WAR I
AUG 30 1898   SEPT 27 1966

"AUNT" / HATTIE N. REBENSTORF / 1898 1982

DISRUD
NORMAN K. / APR. 13, 1929 / [blank]
MARILYN A. / DEC. 22, 1934 / JULY 21, 2013

Claude Williams

The location of the grave of Claude Williams, Sadie's son and Faye's brother, was unknown to me until discovering on 4 March 2021 that his cremains had been found and consecrated in a columbarium for war veterans in 2019. Family lore held that Claude had just "disappeared". My impression is that even his sister Faye, who died in 1995, did not know the particulars of his death.

Coeur d'Alene Memorial Gardens

Coeur d'Alene Memorial Gardens originated as Restlawn Memorial Park in 1955. It later became Coeur d'Alene Memorial Gardens Cemetery, Columbarium & Monuments.

Anstine graves

The Baldwin's 2nd daughter, Lydia M. (Baldwin) Anstine, her husband Charles A. Anstine, and their 1st daughter Velma, who died in her childhood, are buried together in the same plot at Utica Cemetery in Seward County, Nebraska, where the Anstines farmed.

Utica Cemetery, Utica, Seward County, Nebraska
Section B, Row 18
Velma Anstine / 1908-1919
Lydia M. Anstine / 1886-1929 / "Mother"
Charles A. Anstine / 1883-1932 / "Father"

The Anstine's 2nd daughter, Lennie Severns (1910-1997), is buried with her husband, William Archie Severns (1906-1991), in Claquato Cemetery in Chehalis, Lewis County, Washington, near Centralia, their home for over half a century after their migration from Seward, Nebraska to Washington in 1937.

Their 3rd daughter, Aura Dey, died in Riverside, California. However, she may be buried in Spokane, Washington, where she and her husband George M. Dey had lived most of their lives after migrating to Washington from Nebraska. Apparently he returned to Spokane after her death.

Their 4th daughter, Imogene LeBaron, died in Federal Way, Washington, and her husband Keith R. LeBaron died in Seattle. Presumably they are buried together in Washington.

Top  

10.9 Baldwin-McGee

James Alfred Baldwin and Nancy Ann McGee

Table 10.9   James Alfred Baldwin's family with Nancy Ann McGee
Table Name Birth Death Age Born Died Buried Vocation
0 James Alfred Baldwin 23 Apr 1864 21 Aug 1954 90 KY Annville Jackson KY McGee Cem Jackson KY Farmer
0 Nancy Ann McGee 22 Sep 1873 13 Apr 1946 72 Jackson KY Welchburg Jackson KY McGee Cem Jackson KY House keeper
1 William Chester Baldwin 6 Feb 1893 22 Jun 1971 78 Pond Creek Jackson KY Salem IN Crown Hill Cem Salem IN Farmer
2 Martha Leonie Baldwin 27 Sep 1895 26 Nov 1899 4 Jackson Co KY Jackson Co KY
3 Stephen Baldwin 5 Apr 1899 20 Mar 1965 65 Pond Creek Jackson KY Hamilton OH Rose Hill Hamilton OH Wage earner
4 Name unknown
5 John A. Baldwin 27 Oct 1903 13 Dec 1961 58 Pond Creek Jackson KY Royrader Jackson KY McGee Cem Jackson KY Ford employee
6 Roy Eldon Baldwin 18 Nov 1906 21 Jul 1980 73 Pond Creek Jackson KY Annville Jackson KY Medlock Cem Annville KY Farmer
7 Walter Raleigh Baldwin 20 Jun 1910 14 Jun 1990 79 Pond Creek Jackson KY Fayette KY Medlock Cem Annville KY Farmer
8 Dorothy Ellen (Mullins) 29 May 1913 17 Oct 2001 88 Jackson Co KY Annville Jackson KY
Baldwin-McGee James Alfred Baldwin (1864-1954)
with Nancy Ann McGee (1873-1946)
Occasion, place, date unknown
Ancestry.com photo posted by MSteckley
  1. James Alfred Baldwin, 1864-1954, was the 8th child and 5th son of John R. Baldwin, the 5th child and 4th son of John R. Baldwin with Margaret Howard. He was born in Jackson County, and died in Annville in Jackson County.
    If the "James Baldwin" named on Margaret's death certificate is James Alfred Baldwin, then it would appear that James was an undertaker as well as a farmer.

    Nancy Ann McGee was a daughter of Robert McGee and Malinda McGee. She was born on 21 September 1873 in Welchburg, Jackson County, Kentucky, and she died on 13 April 1946 in Welchburg in Jackson County. She died at home of a heart attack, and had no doctor, according her death certificate, the informant for which was her daughter-in-law, Edith Baldwin, Walter's wife.

    James and Nancy had at least 8 children. By the 1900 census they had had 3 children of whom 2 survived. By the 1910 census 4 of 6 children had survived, and the 1920 census shows that they had at least 2 more surviving children.
    James and Nancy are buried together in McGee Cemetery in Annville, Jackson County, Kentucky.
  2. William Chester Baldwin (1893–1971) was born on 6 February 1893 in Jackson county, Kentucky. The 1900, 1910, and 1920 censuses show him as "Wm. C.", "Chester", and "Chester" in Pond Creek with his parents, James Alfred Baldwin and Nancy Ann (McGee) Baldwin, and 1, 3, and 5 siblings. Wm. Chester or just "Chester" married Florence McKinney (1899-1969). The 1930 and 1940 censuses show Chester and Florence Baldwin farming in Jefferson in Washington county in Indiana. The 1930 census states that he was 27 and she 21 when they married, which suggests that they married in 1920 sometime after the census. Both are said to have been born in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents. The 1940 census states that Chester had had 10 years of education (H2) and Florence 7. She died on 28 May 1969 and he died on 22 June 1971. They are buried under a common marker in Crown Hill Cemetery, Salem, Washington County, Indiana (see Baldwin-McGee graves below).

    Florence McKinney was born on 13 February 1899. She is shown in the 1900, 1910, and 1920 censuses with her parents and siblings. Florence's mother was Mollie Ann (Garland) McKinney (1869–1940). Mollie's father (Florence's grandfather) was Benjamin Franklin "Frank" Garland (1844-1921), aka "B.F. Garland", who owned land which bordered on the property John R. Baldwin deeded to his wife Margaret Baldwin in 1904, which she in turn deeded to their son N.B. Baldwin in 1909 (see Baldwin deeds below).
  3. Martha Leonie Baldwin 1895–1899. Died in childhood. 1900 census states that Nancy had borne 3 children of whom 2 survived.
  4. Stephen "Steve" Baldwin 1899–1965. Married Elizabeth "Eliza" Carpenter (1900-1996). They are buried together in Rose Hill Burial Park, Hamilton, Butler County, Ohio.
  5. Name unknown. Postulated 4th child presumed to have been born and died between 1900 and 1910 censuses, for 1910 census states that Nancy had borne 6 children of whom 4 survived.
  6. John A. Baldwin, 1903-1961, a Ford employee, married Navaline Murray (1907, a maid, in Butler County, Ohio, on 12 October 1929.
  7. Roy Eldon Baldwin, 1906–1980. Married Oma Mae Shepherd (1909-1992). 1940 census shows them with 2 children, Hazel 11 (Hazel Maxie Baldwin, b1928) and Doris 9 (Doris Baldwin, b1931). Roy and Oma are buried together in Medlock Cemetery, Annville, Jackson County, Kentucky.
  8. Walter Raleigh Baldwin, 1910–1990. Walter married Edith Price (1919-2001). The 1940 census shows them living with Walter's parents James and Nancy Baldwin, with a 1-year-old son Lonnie L. Baldwin. They are buried together in Medlock Cemetery, Annville, Jackson County, Kentucky.
    Pronounced "Walder Rawlee Balden" according to Ross Murray, a son of B.J. Baldwin Rudder, a daughter of Walter Baldwin (Facebook, 22 November 2018).
  9. Dorothy Ellen Baldwin, 1913–2001. Also known as "Dortha Ellen" but usually as just "Ellen". Married Rovie Straus Mullins (1906-1982). 1940 census shows them with 3 children -- Lora G. 6, Billy W. 5, and Lenville L. 1.
Baldwin-McGee James Alfred Baldwin and Nancy Ann (McGee) Baldwin with children, circa 1915
Back Steve, Chester Front John, James (sitting), Walter, Nancy (sitting), Ellen (lap), Roy
Slightly straightened image of photo from B.J. Baldwin Rudder
Baldwin-McGee James Alfred Baldwin and sons at Nancy Ann (McGee) Baldwin's burial, 1946
Left to right Steve, Walter, Chester, John, Roy, James
Slightly straightened image of photo from B.J. Baldwin Rudder

Top  

Chronology of Baldwin-McGee family

10.8 James Alfred Baldwin and Nancy Ann McGee

Baldwin-McGee family in 1860 to 1940 censuses
1860 1870 1880 1890 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940
Baldwin
James Alfred
Born 1864 Sturgeon Pct 5
Graw Hawk PO
Jackson Cnty
Kentucky
Pond Creek
Precinct No 5
Jackson Cnty
Kentucky
James and Nancy
married in 1892
James and Nancy farmed in Pond Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
Nancy died in 1946 in Welchburg in Jackson County
John died in 1954 in Annville in Jackson Country
They are buried in McGee Cemetery in Annville
McGee
Nancy Ann
Born 1873 Pond Creek
Precinct No 5
Jackson Cnty
Kentucky

Baldwin-McGee chronology

1870-1880 censuses

1870 census for the Gray Hawk Post Office area in Sturgeon Precinct No. 6, Jackson County, Kentucky, shows "James A. Baldwin" (6) living with his father John R. Baldwin (41), a farmer, his mother Margaret (35), keeping house, siblings John M. (18), Mary E. (17), William H. (14), Robert E. (12), Newton B. (8), Elihu J. (3), and Henry C. (2). James V. Howard (23) and Sarah E. Thomas (14) were also living with the family. John, William, and Robert were farm laborers. James Howard, probably Margaret (nee Howard's) brother, was also a farm laborer. Sarah Thomas was a domestic servant. The household's real estate and personal property were valued at 400 and 250 dollars. Margaret and her youngest sons James A., Elihu, and Henry C. were born in Kentucky. All others in the household were born in Virginia. The two oldest children -- John M. (18) and Mary E. (17) -- are John R. Baldwin's children with his 1st wife, Rebecca (Howard) Baldwin (1828-1855), Margaret's deceased older sister.

1880 census shows "James A. Baldwin" (16) living in Jackson County, Kentucky, apparently in Pond Creek, with his father John R. Baldwin (51), mother Margaret (44), and younger siblings, brothers Newton B. (19), Elihur J. (13), and Henry C. (12), sister Martha A. (9), and brothers George F. (7), Samuel L. B. (5), Archelus F. (3), and Charles N. (8/12). His father, himself, and all his brothers down to and including Henry, are laborers, probably in a coal mine. Margaret is keeping house.

1900-1940 censuses

1900 census shows "James A. Baldwin" (36) born April 1864, as head of household, farming, with his wife, "Nancy A." (26) born Sept 1874, and sons "Wm. C." (7) born Feb 1893 and "Stephen" (1) born April 1999, in Pond Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky.

1910 census shows "James Baldwin" (44), with wife "Nancy" (36), and sons "Chester" (17), "Stevie" (11), "John" (7), and "Roy" (3), farming on a general farm on East Bernstadt Road in Magisterial District 3, Jackson County, Kentucky.

1920 census shows "James Baldwin" (55) with wife "Nancy A." (46), sons "Chester" (26), "Steve" (20), "John A." (16), "Roy" (12), and "Walter" (10), and daughter "Ellen" (6). James A. is a "farmer" on a "general farm", and Nancy and all the children except Ellen are "farm laborer" on a "home farm", in Pond Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky.

1930 census shows "James A. Baldwin" (61) and wife "Nancy" (52) with son "Walter" (18) and daughter "Ellen" (16) at Pond Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky. James A. is a "farmer" on a "general farm" and Walter is a "laborer" on a "farm".

1940 census shows "James Baldwin" (75) with wife "Nancy" (66) and son "Walter" (29) and his wife "Edith" (21) and their daughter "Lonnie L." (1), living in Magisterial District 1. John is a "farmer" and Walter is a "laborer" both on a "farm". The "Highest grade of school completed" for the 4 adults was respectively 4, 4, 6, and 8.

The average levels of schooling in poorer rural communities at the time reflected a social climate in which children were valued more for their labor on farms and in mines than for their potential as recipients of a 12-grade or even 8-grade school education. Such were then the economic realities of such communities in the United States. And such are still the realities in some other countries today.

Top  

Baldwin-McGee Baldwin headstones

James A. Baldwin (1864-1954) and Nancy Ann (McGee) Baldwin (1874-1946)
McGee Cemetery, Jackson County, Kentucky
Death certificates as posted by Heaven Sent on Find a Grave

Baldwin-McGee Baldwin headstones Wm. Chester and Florence Baldwin headstone
Crown Hill Cemetery, Salem, Indiana
Photograph by richard dixon copped from
Find a Grave

Baldwin-McGee graves

William Bascom Wetherall's great uncle
James A. Baldwin and his family

The graves shown here are of members of the family of James Alfred Baldwin (1864-1954) and his wife Nancy Ann McGee (1874-1946). James was the first younger brother of N.B. Baldwin, the maternal grandfather of this writer's father William B. Wetherall, hence his great uncle and my great-great uncle.

James A. Baldwin appears to be the sibling with whom N.B. Baldwin remained the closest, in that deeds concerning N.B. Baldwin's land turned up in the possession of the Roy Baldwin and Walter Baldwin lines of Baldwin-McGee descendants still living in Kentucky.

McGee Cemetery

McGee Cemetery is a small family graveyard in Jackson County, Kentucky. Practically all of the fewer than 20 graves in the cemetery are of people named McGee. The few that are not McGees by name are former McGees or in-laws, such as Nancy Ann (McGee) Baldwin and her husband James A. Baldwin.

James Alfred Baldwin (1864-1954)
wife Nancy Ann (McGee) Baldwin (1873-1946)

Medlock Cemetery

Medlock Cemetery, in Annville, Jackson County, Kentucky, includes the following Baldwin-Howard and Baldwin-McGee graves.

Baldwin-Howard

Henry Clay Baldwin (1867-1950)
Linda Abrams Baldwin (1880-1950) (Henry's wife)

Baldwin-McGee

Roy E. Baldwin (1906-1980)
wife Oma Mae (Shepherd) Baldwin (1909-1992)

Walter R. Baldwin (1910-1990)
wife Edith (Price) Baldwin (1919-2001)
son Lonnie L. Baldwin (1938-1967)

Top  

20. Baldwin-Seale

John M. Baldwin and Elizabeth Seale

Table 20   John M. and Elizabeth (Seale) Baldwin family
Table Name Birth Death (Note 1) Age Born Died Buried Vocation
0 John Milton Baldwin ntl 1802 ntl Nov 1855 52-53 VA Lee Co VA Farmer
0 Elizabeth Mary Seale abt 1808 nlt 1858 47-50 Lee Co VA Lee Co VA House keeper
1 Mary Ann (Thomas, Orton) Jul 1826 abt 1891 abt 65 Lee Co VA Corbin Whitley Co KY House keeper
2 John R. Baldwin (Notes 2, 4) 22 Sep 1828 10 Mar 1909 80 VA Jackson Co KY Wilson Cem Moores Creek KY Farmer, minister
3 William (Note 3) abt 1830 abt 1854 abt 24 Lee Co VA Lee Co VA Farmer
4 Sarah Jane (Grubb) (Note 3) 2 Sep 1833 23 Apr 1888 54 Lee Co VA Peerless Lawrence Co IN Fish Cem Lawrence Co IN House keeper
5 Harriet K. (Mink) abt 1834 nlt 1910 66-76 Lee Co VA Laurel Co KY House keeper
6 Joseph abt 1838 nlt 1858 17-20 Lee Co VA Lee Co VA
7 Thomas Newton (Note 4) 29 Oct 1843 10 Mar 1924 80 Lee Co VA McWhorter Laurel Co KY Carrier Cem Laurel Co VA Farmer
8 Robert Clinton abt 1845 abt 1855 abt 10 Lee Co VA Lee Co VA
9 Margaret M. abt 1848 abt 1855 abt 7 Lee Co VA Lee Co VA

Notes

1. Demise of family   In the mid 1850s, the 11-member Baldwin-Seale nuclear family lost 6 members to death. The families of neighbors and relatives also lost quite a few members at this time.

2. Soroate marriage   In 1855, John R. lost his wife Rebecca Howard on 3 April, remarried her sister Margaret Howard on 13 June, and appears to have buried his father John M. by November 1855 and his mother shortly after that. While not obligatory, marrying a deceased wife's sister was fairly common among early American farm families. When customary, the practice of a man marrying his deceased wife's sister is called "soroate". The corresponding practice of a man marrying a deceased brother's wife -- called "levirate" -- was less common. Both practices serve the purpose of providing for the welfare of motherless or fatherless children while keeping the children in the main family.

3. Fence neighbors marry   William married Harriet Grubb. Sarah married Harriet Grubb's brother Lorenzo Grubb. Fence-neighbor marriages were extremely common. See John M. Baldwin's fence neighbor Archibald Grubb: Baldwin-Grubb family intermarriages and other ties for details.

4. Fosters orphaned sibling   Thomas Newton Baldwin, orphaned in his early teens by his parents death, was fostered by his older brother John R. and Margaret, his sister-in-law. Older siblings and collateral relatives commonly adopted children orphaned by the deaths of both parents. When only one parent died, older children stepped into the shoes of the deceased parent. When a surviving parent was unable to raise the children, they were either taken in by older siblings or relatives, or placed under the protection of a court-appointed guardian who was bonded to provide for the child's welfare. A guardian might also be empowered to execute an indent1ure of guardianship with a 3rd party, a contract which made the child a ward of the 3rd party, who agreed to "master" the child as an "apprentice" until the child came of age. William Baldwin's granddaughter was subject to such a guardian-mediated agreement with a man who had known her parents and fostered her after they died. See John M. Baldwin's last will and testament for details.

Preface to notes

In the above table, I have taken into the account that 4 of John M. Baldwin's heirs -- Mary A. Thomas, John R. Baldwin, Sarah J. Grubb, and Harriet H. Baldwin -- are known to have sold his 150-acre farm on 20 March 1858. Presumably they did so after father and mother had died (the order of their deaths is not clear). And apparently 3 other siblings who stood to be heirs had either died before their father (Margaret and Clinton) or after their father (Joseph). It was clear in John M. Baldwin's will of 2 March 1855 (see below) that William was already dead and his son, little William, would have equal standing with his aunts and uncles. Only Thomas Newton Baldwin -- who, born on 29 October 1843, was only 14 on 20 March 1858, and was living with John R. and Margaret Baldwin. While he and William's son little William clear stood to be heirs, on a par with Mary, John, Sarah, and Harriet, it appears that the 4 adults of the 6 heirs were the only legally competent representatives. Perhaps they intended to share the amount they received from the sale with their minor sibling Thomas Newton and their nephew little William. Whatever their intent, however, some 45 years later, Lulu May Postelwait, with the support of the testimony of Harriet (Grubb, Baldwin) Moles, her paternal grandmother (see below), sought to recover her father's share of the property.

While Lulu May Baldwin Postelwait's case is interesting in its own right, the implications of the dates and events revealed in the supporting documents, including John M. Baldwin's will, but especially the deposition of William's wife Harriet (Grubb, Baldwin) Moles, forces family historians to consider the following tentative facts.

  1. Fact 1   As of 2 March 1855, John M. and Elizabeth Baldwin, and all their children except William, are live. William has left a son, however, and he is treated as an heir of his father's share of John M. Baldwin's estate on a par with his aunts and uncles after Elizabeth dies. John M. clearly anticipates that he will die before Elizabeth. He has probably been ill.
  2. Fact 2   John M. Baldwin's deed is recorded on 19 November 1855 (not 1895), presumably shortly after he died. This is at least a clue as to when he may have died.
  3. Fact 3   As of 20 March 1858, both John M. and Elizabeth are dead. Presumably John M. died first and Elizabeth inherited his property pursuant to the will. Then she died and left her children and grandson what was left of the original estate. However, apparently Margaret and Clinton died before John M. and Joseph died after him but before the sale in 1858 -- all without issue.
  4. Fact 4   William Baldwin died between 1852 and 1855 depending on how one reckons the birth of little William. Hattie (Grubb, Baldwin) Moles's deposition suggests 1852, but little William's ages on 3 successive decennial censuses -- 5, 15, and 25 in 1860, 1870, and 1880 -- suggest that little William was born around 1855, hence his father was alive as late as 1854.

The Baldwin-Seale nuclear family -- 11 strong in 1850 -- was reduced to only 5 siblings by 1860. Moreover, the 6 lost members were taken by death in the span of only 3-5 years between roughly 1853/1854 to 1857/1858. However one shuffles these facts, they suggest an epidemic -- typhoid fever?

Whatever happened, the Baldwin-Seale household ceased to exist. With the sale of John M. Baldwin's farm, his children scattered to the winds. It appear they kept in touch, as well as they could at the time. Thomas Newton Baldwin was especially close to John R. Baldwin, who had taken him in after their parents died, and followed him to Kentucky after the Civil War.

Sometime during the first half of 1863, at the height of the Civil War in Lee County, even John R. and Margaret Baldwin -- arguably the most robust of the large families spawned on the Baldwin-Seale and Howard-Mark sides of the Baldwin-Howard union -- decided to leave Lee County and seek their fortunes west of the Cumberlands.

Notes

  1. John Milton Baldwin was born the 2nd of as many as 13 children (and the 2nd of as many as 6 sons) of John R. Baldwin (1772–1830) and Elizabeth Newberry (1770–1825). He was born in Bedford in Montgomery County, Virginia, according to some family trees (unconfirmed) -- in 1792 (58 on 1850 census) or 1802 (30-39 on 1840 census). The birth of Mary Ann Baldwin (1826-1910) in July 1826 (according to 1900 census) suggests that he and Elizabeth Seale married in 1825 when he was about 23 and she around 18 (taking the earlier of the contending birth years). He appears to have fathered at least the 9 children listed in the above table. 4 of these nine, including the youngest 2, died during the 1850s. 3 of the 4, and John M. Baldwin himself and Elizabeth, also died between 1855 and 1858, suggesting a common illness.
  2. "Elizabeth Seale" appears on the death certificate of "Thomas Newton Baldwin" (1843-1924) as the maiden name of his mother. Her parents appear to have been "Fielding Seale" (1770–1838) and "Jane Bales" (1787–1841). Elizabeth was alive in 1855 when John M. Baldwin wrote his last will and testament. She appears to have passed away before 1858, when 5 of her children sold the farm, which would have been hers to sell were she still living.
  3. Mary Ann Baldwin (1826–1910) is "Mary A." or "Mary" in most records. She appears to have married James Alvin Thomas (1824–1861) around 1842 and they had around 8 children. On 14 July 1867, she married John Vanderford Orton (1795-1870), with whom she had 2 children, one born in 1871 shortly after his death.
    1. The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County, Virginia, shows "James A. Thomas" (25) farming with "Mary A." (24) and 2 children, "Henry C." (5) and "Elizabeth" (3). All were born in Virginia. James is a person over 20 years old who cannot read or write.
      1. The Thomas household is enumerated immediately after John M. Baldwin's household. I would guess that John M. and Elizabeth Baldwin set up Mary Ann, their first child, and the first of their children to marry, in a home of her own on the same property.
    2. The 1860 census for the "First Sub-division" of the "County of Claiborne" in Tennessee enumerates the household of "James A. Thomas" (33) with "Mary A." (32) and 6 children -- "Henry C." (15), "Elizabeth" (12), "Wm. H." (9), "Harvey C." (7), "Sarah E." (4), and "Susan J." (2). James A. is a laborer with real estate and personal property valued at respectively $100 and $235. Everyone was born in Virginia except Susan, who was born in Tennessee.
    3. James Alvin Thomas, born in 1827 in Warren in Knox County, Kentucky, died of measles on 9 October 1861 [or 11 September 1861] in Crab Orchard in Lincoln County, Kentucky, while visiting his wife at the home of his sister-in-law Harriet (Baldwin) Mink in Kentucky. At the time, he was serving in Company C, 1st Regiment, Tennessee Infantry Volunteers. Apparently he was on leave.
      1. A Find a Grave memorial states -- "Civil War Union Veteran. Died of measles while still enlisted at the home of Emanuel & Harriet Minks [sic]. Enlisted for 3 years on Aug. 9, 1861, Private, Co. C, 1st Tennessee Volunteer Infantry. Married to Mary Ann Baldwin. Most likely buried at Crab Orchard, Kentucky in 1861, and re-buried at Lebanon National Cemetery [in Lebanon in Marion County, Kentucky] between April 1867 to October 1867." -- This burial scenario is based on a 6 June 2014 letter from the National Cemetery Administion of the Department of Veteran Affairs. The letter initially states "most likely" but its final qualification is "may". The bureaucrats were uable to find any records of Thomas's burial and could only speculate that he "may" have been among some "unknown" soldiers reinterred from Crab Orchard to Lebanon National. "Harriet Minks" is Mary Ann and John R. Baldwin's younger sister Harriet Baldwin married to John Mink.
    4. Mary A. (Baldwin) Thomas marries John V. Orton on 14 July 1867 in London, Laurel County, Kentucky.
    5. The 1870 census for the Raccoon Post Office District of Raccoon Voting Precinct in Laurel County, Kentucky, shows her as Virginia-born "Mary Orton" (42), head of household, with 2 children -- Tennessee-born "Harriet" (9) and Kentucky-born "James" (3). The 1870 census for the London Post Office area of London Voting Precinct in London County, Kentucky, enumerates John V. Orton as "Jno. V. Orton" (75) in the household of a "W" [white] "Waggon Maker". He is listed last, apparently as a boarder, following a "B" [black] "Black Smith", who was probably an employee. I would guess that Harriet, born in Tennessee, was Mary's last child with James Thomas, while Jesse was the 1st of the 2 children she had with John, in what for him was a 3rd marriage.
    6. 17 March 1873   A declaration for pension benefits for 5 minor children of James A. and Mary A. Thomas, made on 17 March 1873 by their guardian, Jesse Rogers, to the Chancery Court of Claiborne County, Tennessee, south relief for the children under the 6 June 1866 Pension Act, on grounds that they had been abandoned by their mother, who was unsuitable by reason of immoral conduct.
    7. 27 March 1889   Henry Clay Thomas, son of John A. and Mary A. Thomas, made a deposition, dated 27 March 1889, regarding himself and his parents during the War of the Rebellion, apparently related to an application for a pension.
      1. Both the 1873 declaration and the 1889 deposition remark that James A. Thomas died of measles while visiting his wife at the home of her sister Harriet Mink in Kentucky.
    8. 25 July 1890   A Civil War pension record card shows "Mary A. Thomas" as the dependant widow of "James A. Thomas", a soldier who served in Company C, 1st Tennessee Infantry. The filing date is 25 July 1890 and the application number is 463,037, but there is no certificate number. Whether this is Mary Ann (Baldwin) (Thomas) Ortin reverting to Thomas -- or another James A. and Mary A. Thomas -- is not yet clear to me. Some family trees say she died in 1890, others in 1891.
    9. 2 January 1904   Henry Clay Thomas, born on 7 October 1845 Lee County, Virginia, died on 2 January 1904 in Georgetown in Scott County, Kentucky.
    10. 11 March 1904   A Civil War pension record card shows "Martha J. Thomas" as the dependant widow of "Henry C. Thomas", a soldier who served in both Company A, 10th Illinois Infantry, and Company E, 2nd Tennessee Infantry. The filing date is 11 Mar 1904, the application number is 801,724, and the certificate numbers is 594,862.
    11. 1924   A Kentucky death certificate shows that "Harvey Clinton Thomas", born in Virginia on 7 October 1855, died on 20 July 1924 in Rockcastle of diabetes. His father was Virginia-born "Marion Thomas" and his mother was Virginia-born "Mary Baldwin". The informant was "W.H. Thomas" -- Harvey's younger brother. Apparently they called their grandfather "Marion".
    12. 1945   A Kentucky death certificate states that "Jesse Green Orton", born in Kentucky on 8 March 1871, died in Rockcastle on 22 November 1945. His father was North Carolina-born "John Orton" and his mother was Virginia-born "Mary Baldwin". His birth date suggests that he was conceived around June 1870. The 1870 census was enumerated in June and July as of 1 June 1870.
    13. See both James Alvin Thomas and Henry Clay Thomas under Civil War for images of pension-related records and transcriptions of part the 1873 declaration and 1889 deposition.
  4. John R. Baldwin (1829–1909) was the patriarch of the Baldwin-Howard line.
    1. See 10. Baldwin-Howard: John R. Baldwin and Rebecca and Margaret Howard for details.
  5. Sarah Jane Baldwin (1833–1888) married Lorenzo Grubb, a neighbor. Sarah's younger brother William Baldwin married Harriet Grubb, Lorenzo's younger sister. The Grubb farm appears to have shared a boundary with the Baldwin farm, according to a 1903 deposition by Harriet Moles, nee Harriet Baldwin, nee Harriet Grubb (see John M. Baldwin's will (below) for details. The 1850 census for Lee County enumerates the Grubb and Baldwin families on the same sheet. Wyrick, Thomas, and Markham households, then or future Grubb and Baldwin in-law families, are also on this sheet.
    1. 2 September 1833   Born in Lee County, Virginia.
    2. About 1834   Lorenzo D. Grubb born in Lee County, Virginia. His parents, "Archibald Grubb" (1810–1853) and "Elizabeth Wyrick" (1809–1844), married on 11 April 1830 in Wythe County, Virginia. By the 1840 census, they were farming in Lee County
    3. The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County, Virginia, enumerates the Archibald Grubb and John M. Baldwin households -- and three in-law families (Wyrick, Thomas, and Markham) -- on the same sheet. The census shows "Archibald Grubb" (39) with his 2nd wife "Ann" (22) and 8 children, 6 by his 1st wife Elizabeth -- "Mary A." (19), "Lorenzo" (17), "Hariet" [sic = Harriet] (15), "Elizabeth" (13), "John" (12), and "Catharine" (10) -- and 2 by Ann, "Martha J." (3) and "William" (1). Archibald Grubb is farming and his owned real estate is valued at $800. Lorenzo is also farming, presumably with his father. Ann -- who Archibald married in 1846, after the death of his 1st wife Elizabeth in 1844 -- is marked as a person over 20 who is unable to read or write (as was Elizabeth).
    4. About 1851   Sarah J. Baldwin married Lorenzo D. Grubb. Their first 2 children were born in Virginia, the next 2 in Kentucky, and 2 more in Indiana. Their first child appears to have been "Naervesta J. Grubb" (1854–1880), who was born in Rose Hill in Lee County on 13 November 1854 but died in Lawrence County in Indiana on 18 April 1880, 6 weeks shy of the 1 June 1880 enumeration datum.
    5. The 1880 census for Shawswick Township in Lawrence County in Indiana shows "Lorenzo D. Grubb" (40) with "Sarah J." (46), "Archible" (23), "John M." (19), "Charles C." (17), "Jessie S." (12), and "Dudly H." (4). Lorenazo, John, and Charles are farmers, Archible is a laborer, and Sarah is keeping house. Lorenzo, Sarah, and Archible are Virginia born to Virginia-born parents. John and Charles were born in Kentucky, and Jessie and Dudly were born in Indiana.
    6. 23 April 1888   Sarah Jane (Baldwin) Grugg died in Lawrence County, Indiana. She is buried in Fish Cemetery in Lawrence County.
    7. 1 July 1893   Lorenzo dies in Lawrence County, Indiana.
  6. William Baldwin, born about 1834, died about 1852, is "William Baldwin deceased" on his father John M. Baldwin's last will and testament dated 2 March 1855. He appears to have married Harriet Grubb, a neighbor, around 1850 in Tazwell, Tennessee, just south of the Rose Hill area of Lee County, Virginia, where they lived on the "Milton Baldwin farm" with William Baldwin's parents. Harriet Moles testified in 1903 that she married William Baldwin about 52 or 53 years ago, and married Elihu Moles in 1856 after about 4 years as a widow. See John M. Baldwin's will (below) for details.
    1. 1829-1830   William Baldwin born according to 1850
    2. 8 April 1836   Harriet Grubb born in With [sic = Wythe] County, Virginia, but raised in Lee County, Virginia, according to Harriet's deposition. Her father's Grubb farm, and her step-father John M. Baldwin's farm "joined" (were immediate neighbors).
    3. 1838   Elihu Harden Moles born in Virginia. However, the 1850 census shows "Harden" (12) living with his parents "Wm. S. Moles" (38) and "Elizabeth" (37) -- the 3rd oldest of 10 children ranging in age from 18 to 1. Everyone in the family was born in Virginia.
    4. The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County, Virginia, shows "Archibald Grubb" (39) with his 2nd wife "Ann" (22) and 8 children, 6 by his 1st wife Elizabeth -- "Mary A." (19), "Lorenzo" (17), "Hariet" [sic = Harriet] (15), "Elizabeth" (13), "John" (12), and "Catharine" (10) -- and 2 by his 2nd wife Ann, "Martha J" (3) and "William" (1). He is farming and his owned real estate is valued at $800. Lorenzo is also farming, presuming with his father. Ann is marked as a person over 20 who is unable to read or write (as was Elizabeth).
    5. 1850-1851   William Baldwin married Harriet Grubb in Tazwell, Tennessee, according to her deposition on behalf of her granddaughter. In the deposition, she remarked that "Taswell [sic], Tennessee, . . . is in the county immediately joining Lee County, Virginia." By roads today, Tazwell, the county seat of Claiborne County, Tennessee, is about 72 kilomters (45 miles), roughly 50 minutes, west and south of Jonesville, the county seat of Virginia County. It's about one-third closer from the Rose Hill area where the Baldwins and Grubbs lived practically cheek by jowl.
    6. 26 May 1856   William's widow Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin married Elihu H. Moles in Claiborne County in Tennessee, according a Tennessee marriage index.
      1. In her 1903 deposition in the matter of her granddaughter Lulu May Postelwait's claim to her Baldwin father's inheritance, she recalls that she and Elihu Moles were married in Tazwell, the county seat of Claiborne County. However, her recollection that she remarried after about 4 years of being a widow is not supported by the ages assigned her Baldwin son, William L. Baldwin aka William Moles, who appears to have been born only a year or two before she remarried.
    7. The 1860 census for the Stanford Post Office area of Lincoln County, Kentucky, shows "Elihu H. Moles" (23) with "Harriett" (24), and 2 children, "Wm L. Moles" (5) and "Edmond Delany" (12). Elihu is a carpenter. All were born in Virginia. Harriet is a person over 20 who is unable to read or write.
      1. William's stated age in 1860 -- 5 years old -- is consistent with his the ages given in 1870 and 1880 -- 15 and 25 years old. All ages suggests that he was born in 1855. This implies that he was conceived in 1854, which means that his father -- William Baldwin died no earlier than 1854.
    8. The 1870 census for Jefferson Townswhip in Owen County in Indiana shows "Elihu Moles" (33) with "Harriett" (34), "William" (15), "John H." (9), and "Mary E." (7). Elihu is preaching, Harriett is keeping house, and William "has no employment". Elihu, Harriett, and William were born in Virginia, John in Kentucky, and Mary in Indiana." Harriet can neither read or write.
    9. The 1880 census for "Buck-Creek Township" in Hancock County, Indian, shows the household of "Elihu H. Moles" (43) with his wife "Harriet" (44), a daughter "Ada I." (9), and a "S Son" [step son] "William L. Baldwin" (25). Elihu is a preacher and Harriet is keeping house, while William, who was single, is a roof painter. All were born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents except Ada, who was born in Indiana.
    10. 30 September 1881   William L. Baldwin, William's son with Harriet Grubb, was married to Phoebe Isabell Williams in Putnam County, Indiana, by Babtist minister Alexander S. Mayhall, according to marriage license.
    11. 27 January 1885   Lulu May Baldwin was born in Mineral Springs in Barry County, Missouri, according to a delayed certificate of birth, an application for which was signed, subscribed, and sworn to before a notary public on 14 November 1953 by "Lulu May (Baldwin) Murray". The application was supported with an affidavit by F.G. Wilkenson, a friend, dated 25 November 1953, and it was filed on 4 December 1953 in the Division of Health, Jefferson City, Missouri.
    12. June 1885   Bell (Williams) Baldwin, born about 1857, dies in Barry County, Missouri.
    13. 20 January 1888   William L. Baldwin dies in Barry County, Missouri.
    14. 31 July 1890   Elihu Hardin Moles, born in Virginia in 1838, dies in Indiana.
    15. 1901   Lulu May Baldwin marries Charles Postelwait (b1877) in Pawnee County in Oklahoma Territory.
    16. 23 August 1902   Lulu May Postelwait gives birth to Verna Postelwait (1902–1977).
    17. 1903-1905   Lulu May Postelwait files a legal action in Lee County, Virginia, to recover equity in her father's share of John M. Baldwin's land. See John M. Baldwin's will (below) for details.
    18. 27 October 1904   Lulu May Postelwait gives birth to her second daughter, Thelma Postelwait (1904–1998), in Mound County in Oklahoma Territory.
    19. 17 July 1907   Harriet Moles died in Muncie in Delaware County, Indiana, of "Acute Gastro-enteritis". She had been a widow of "Rev. E.H. Moles". Her father was Virginia-born "John Grubb" and her mother was "Unknown" according to the death certificate. The informant was "John Moles" -- her son. She was slated for burial in Monticello in White County in Indiana. The death certificate of Archibald Grubb's last son, born shortly after his father's death (nlt November 1852), gives his name as "John Grubbs". Apparently he was also known as "John" -- his father's name, as well as the name of his 2nd son John Grubb (1838-1900).
    20. 16 November 1907   Oklahoma Territory becomes the 46th state.
    21. 10 September 1969   Lulu May (Baldwin) (Postelwait) (Maltby) Murray dies in Tonkawa in Kay County, Oklahoma. She appears to have had at least 5 children -- 2 with Postelwait and 3 with Maltby -- 4 of whom survived her. She had married Murray by 1953 when she applies for and receives a delayed certificate of birth from the Division of Health of Missouri (see image).
  7. Harriet K. Baldwin (1835–1900) is represented as "Harriett" on many records. Some transcriptions show "Harriet H." but the clearest handwritten record shows "K." rather than "H." Her husband's family name is mostly "Mink" but some records show "Minks", and it appears that some of their children may have been known by "Minks". Both Emanuel and Harriet are still alive at the time of the 1900 census. Presumably they died before the 1910 census.
    1. The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County, Virginia, shows "Harriet" (16) living with her parents, John M. and Elizabeth Baldwin.
    2. The 1850 census for the Southern District of Rockcastle County in Kentucky shows "Manuel" (14) as the 3rd oldest of 9 children of "John Mink" (47) and "Susan" (37). John has no occupation. Neither he nor Susan can read or write. The oldest child, Elizabeth (20), cannot read or write. John Mink was born in Virginia. The place-of-birth column for others in the household is blank.
    3. The 1860 census for Mt. Vernon Post Office area in Rockcastle County, Kentucky, shows "Emanul Mink" (26) living in household of "B. K. Bethewram" (46) and his wife "Lucy Ann" (40) and 5 children. Bethewram is the presiding judge at the county court. Mink is a laborer. Everyone in the household was born in Kentucky, according to the census.
    4. 13 January 1861   Emanuel Mink marries in Rockcastle County, according to a Kentucky marriage index.
    5. June 1863   Register of Class 1 persons subject to military duty in 8th Congressional District consisting of Rockcastle, Pulaski, and other counties of Kentucky shows, under Rockcastle, "Mink Emanuel 33 White Farmer Married Kentucky [place of birth]".
    6. The 1870 census for the Mount Vernon Post Office area in Voting District No. 1 of Rockcastle County in Kentucky shows "Emanuel Minks" [Mink] (38) with "Harriett K." (36) and 5 children -- "John A. N." (8), "Margarett S." (6), "Martha A. F." (4), "Mary A. E." (3), and "James W. B." (6/12). Emanuel is farming and Harriett is keeping house. She can neither read nor write. The parents were born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents, the children in Kentucky.
    7. April 1875   Scan of original roll of "White" births in Rockcastle County, Kentucky, shows -- "Mink Lydia M.E. / F / Alive / Rockcastle / Emanuel Mink / Harriet K. Balwin [sic = Baldwin] / Va / Va / Rockcastle" -- Family name "Mink", Harriet's middle initial "K.", both parents born in Virginia, residing in Rockcastle.
    8. The 1880 census for Enumeration Distict No. 96 (76?) of Rockcastle County, Kentucky, shows "Emanuel Mink " (49) as head with his wife "Harriet" (46) and 8 children -- "John A." (18), "Margret S." (16), "Martha" (15), "Ellen" (13), "William" (10), "Robert" (6), "Lidda" (5), and "Florence" (2). Emanuel is farming, Harriet keeping house, John is a laborer, William is working on a farm. The parents were born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents, the children in Kentucky.
    9. The 1900 census for London Voting Precint 2, part of Magisterial District 3, Laurel County, Kentucky, shows "Emanuel Mink" (68) with his wife "Harriett" (65) -- only. They have been married for 39 years, and 7 of her 9 children are still living. Both were born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents. He is a day laborer and rents his home.
    10. 21 August 1947   "Martha Francis Carpenter" dies of "Senility" in Dorthae in "Lawrel" County, Kentucky. The death certificate states that she was born in Kentucky on 15 October 1857 [sic = 1867], and identifies her father as Virginia-born "Manuel Minks" [sic = Emanuel Mink] and her mother aas Virginia-born "Harriet Balton" [sic = Baldwin]. The informant, Robert L. Carpenter, appears to be Martha's son. Her husband, W. T. Carpenter, had died.
    11. 19 March 1952   "James William Minks" dies in Pittsburg, Laurel County, Kentucky, of chronic nephritis. He was born on 20 November 1876 in Kentucky. His father was "Emanuel Minks" and his mother was "Harriet Baldwin".
    12. 15 May 1952   "Lyda A. White" dies in Phoenix, Arizona of "Acute Coronary Occlusion". Her death certificate states that she was born in Kentucky on 20 April 1877 [sic 1875]. Her father was Virginia-born "Emmanuel Minks", her mother Virginia-born "Harriett Baldwin".
  8. Joseph Baldwin was born around 1838 judging from his age in the 1850 census. And he died shortly after his father died, according to a 1903 deposition made by his sister-in-law, Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles. John M. Baldwin seems to have died around November 1855, and Joseph had to have died before March 1858 when surviving children sold their father's farm in Lee County, Virginia. So Joseph seems to have died between 1855-1858, most likely in 1856 or 1857. Apparently he hadn't married.
  9. Thomas Newton Baldwin (1843–1924), orphaned in the late 1850s when in his mid teens, was taken in by his older brother John R. Baldwin and sister-in-law Margaret. During the War of the Rebellion, he served in the Confederacy, and after the war he settled in Kentucky near his brother.
    1. See both Thomas N. Baldwin and Thomas N. Baldwin in Confederate service for details.
  10. Robert Clinton Baldwin was born around 1844-1845 as he was 5 years old in the 1850 census. According to a 1903 deposition made by Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles, his sister-in-law, "Clinton" as he was called died before her father John M. baldwin. But she was alive when John made his will on 2 March 1855. And John appears to have died around November 1855. So Clinton appears to have died in 1855.
  11. Margaret M. Baldwin was born around 1847-1848 as she was 2 years old in the 1850 census. According to a 1903 deposition made by her sister-in-law, Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles, Margaret died before her father John M. baldwin. But she was alive when John made his will on 2 March 1855. And John appears to have died around November 1855. So Margaret seems to have died in 1855.

Top  

Chronology of Baldwin-Seale family

The Powell Valley that practically defines the country that became Lee County, Virginia, became a funnel of westward migration from eastern parts of Virginia but also from North Carolina and Tennessee. Some people continued west through Cumberland Gap into western Tennessee or Kentucky. Others stayed on whatever land they could find.

Lee County quickly filled up during the early 1800s. The boundaries of the county, formed from Russell County in 1792, and named after then incumbant governor of Virginia, Henry "Light Horse Harry" Lee III (1756-1818), a Revolutionary War officer, and the father of Robert E. Lee (1807-1870), a Conferate States Army commander.

Censuses

The 1800 and 1810 censuses for Lee County are lost but some taxation records survive.

1820 and 1830 censuses show no Baldwins, Seales, or Howards in the county. Several families that had prominently figured in the formation of Lee County, and which at some point were neighbors of the Baldwin-Seale, Howard-Marks, and Baldwin-Howard families in the Rose Hill area west of Jonesville, are well represented in these earlier censuses -- including several Ewing families in both the 1820 and 1830 census, and some Bales families in the 1830 census.

The 1840 census for Lee County in Virginia shows "John M. Baldwin" as the head of a household consisting of 8 members including himself -- all "Free White Persons" of the following ages by sex. The names and ages keyed to the 1850 census (below) are my conjuctures.

      Male  Female  Totals  Conjectured names and ages   
  0-4    1     1       2    Joseph 2 (1838), Harriet 6
  5-9    1     1       2    William 10 (1829), Sarah 7 (1833-09-02)
10-14    1     1       2    John R. 12 (1828-09-22), Mary Ann 14 (1825)
15-19
20-29
30-39    1     1       2    John M. 38, Elizabeth 34 (1838)
---------------------------
Totals   4      4      8
1 person engaged in agriculture.

The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County, Virginia, shows "John M. Baldwin" (58) as head of household with "Elizabeth" (44), "William" (20), "Sarah" (17), "Hariet" (16), "Joseph" (12), "Thomas N." (7), "Robert C." (5), and "Margaret M." (2). John M. is farming on an estate valued at $800. William is also farming, presumably with his father. William attended school within the year. Elizabeth is enumerated as a person over 20 years of age who is unable to read and write.

  1. On the same 1850 census", enumerated immediately after John M. Baldwin's household, is the household of "James A. Thomas" (25) farming with "Mary A." (24) and 2 children, "Henry C." (5) and "Elizabeth" (3). James is a person over 20 years old who cannot read or write. All were born in Virginia.
    1. Mary A. Thomas is John M. and Elizabeth Baldwin's 1st child, and also the 1st of their children to marry -- around 1842.
  2. Another sheet of the same 1850 census shows "John R. Baldwin" (22) farming with his wife "Rebecca" (22) and their daughter "Elizabeth" (1). Yet another sheet shows Rebecca's younger sister "Margaret" (14) still living with her parents, "John F. Howard" (48) and "Elizabeth" (38), and 2 older and 5 younger siblings.
  3. Apparently neither James A. Thomas nor John R. Baldwin own land, for the "Value of Real Estate owned" column on the general census is blank -- and neither is enumerated on the agriculture schedule.
    1. My impression is that John M. Baldwin set up his daughter and her husband in their own home, on the premises of the Milton Baldwin farm. His son-in-law is helping him run the farm in lieu of his son John R. Baldwin, who appears to be living elsewhere and may be working on another farm.

Schedule 4 of the 1850 census, concerning Productions of Agriculture in District 31 of Lee County, Virginia, shows the following figures for the farms of Archibald Grubb and John M. Baldwin, enumerated in succession on lines 28-29 on pages 258-259.

Note that John M. Baldwin owns a total of 150 acres of land, of which 50 acres are "improved" and 100 acres are "unimproved" land. The farm has a value of $800 -- the same value shown for "Value of Real Estate owned" on the general census. The Grubb farm totals a similar 160 acres of which 60 are improved. The whereas John M. Baldwin's farm equipment is valued at only $20, Archibald Grubb has $75 worth of equipment.

The farm has a cash value of 800 dollars and the farm equipment is worth 20 dollars. John M. has 2 horses, 3 milch cows, 2 working oxen, 25 other cattle, and 25 swine, 200 sheep, 500 bushels of Indian corn, and 75 bushels of oats.

1850 agriculture schedule

John M. Baldwin and Archibald Grubb farms

                        28      29
                 Archibald  John M.
 1. Name of owner    Grubb Baldwin
Acres of Land
 2.   Improved          60      50    Acres
 3.   Unimproved       100     100    Acres John M. Baldwin owns 150 acres of land
 4. Cash value farm    800     800    Dollars $800 "Value of Real Estate owned" on general census
 5. Value farm equip    75      20    Dollars
Live stock 1 June 1860
 6.   Horses             5       2    Number
 7.   Asses and mules                 Number
 8.   Milch cows         4       3    Number
 9.   Working oxen               2    Number
10.   Other cattle       2       3    Number
11.   Sheep              5      25    Number
12.   Swine             50      25    Number
13. Value livestock    300     200    Dollars     
Produce during year ending 1 June 1860
14.   Wheat                           Bushels
15.   Rye                             Bushels
16.   Indian corn      200     500    Bushels
17.   Oats             200      75    Bushels
18.   Rice                            Pounds
19.   Tobacco                         Pounds
20.   Ginned cotton                   Bales (400 pounds)
21.   Wool              12      50    Pounds
22.   Beans and peas     5       5    Bushels
23.   Irish potatoes             5    Bushels
24.   Sweet potatoes             5    Bushels
25.   Barley                          Bushels    
26.   Buckwheat                       Bushels
27. Value of orchard products         Dollars
28. Wine                              Gallons
29. Value of produce market gardens   Dollars
30. Butter             100      50    Pounds
31. Cheese                            Pounds
32. Hay                               Tons
33. Clover seed                       Bushels
34. Grass seeds                       Bushels
35. Hops                              Pounds
Hemp
36.   Dew rotted                      Tons
37.   Water rotted                    Tons
38. Flax                25      25    Pounds
39. Flaxseed             2       2    Bushels
40. Silk cocoons                      Pounds
41. Maple sugar                 25    Pounds John R. Baldwin produced maple sugar in 1860 
42. Cane sugar Hhds (1,000 pounds)    Hogshead 
43. Molasses                          Gallons
44. Beeswax             10            Pounds
45. Value of homemade
      manufactures      25      25    Dollars 
46. Value of animals 
      slaughtered       50      50    Dollars

On 20 March 1858, Mary A. Thomas, John R. Baldwin, Sarah J. Grubb, and Harriet H. Baldwin -- John M. and Elizabeth Baldwin's 4 adult heirs -- sold their "undivided interest" in the "Milton Baldwin farm" in Rose Hill to to F.H. Bales, who took possession of the whole farm , according to documents associated with an equity bill raised in the chancery court of Lee County in 1903 claiming 1/6th interest in the farm. See John M. Baldwin's will (below) for details.

The 1860 census enumerates the household of "John R. Balwin" [sic = Baldwin] (31) and "Margaret" (22) with 6 children -- 3 born to Rebecca, 2 born to Margaret, and John R's brother "Thas N." (16), who has been orphaned by the deaths of their parents, John M. and Elizabeth Baldwin. The household is enumerated immediately after the households of "R.M. Bales" (53), a farmer, and "Joshwa [sic = Joshua] Ewing" (56), whose occupation is "Dr of Phisicn (?)" [Physician].

The "Value of Estate owned" column shows the following dollar amounts for R.M. Bales (and two Ewing members of his household), Joshua Ewing, and John R. Baldwin.

                              Value of Estate owned
                              Real    Personal
Head of household             Estate  Estate

R.M. Bales (53) farmer         56000   34000
   Margaret W. (43) [wife]
   Catherine E. Ewing (50)      8000    4100
   Harriet C. Ewing (41)                5500
Joshua [H.] Ewing (56) doctor  15000    7443
   Catherine (52) [wife]
John R. Baldwin (31)                     157
   Margaret (22) [wife]
Catherine E. Ewing (1809-1877) and Harriet C. Ewing (1813–1907) appear to be sisters of
Margaret W. [Whitehill] Bales (1819-1889), nee Ewing, the wife of R.M. [Robert McMillan] Bales (1808–1893).
All three are daughters of Samuel E. Ewing (1772–1851) and Mary "Polly" Houston (1778–1842),
and presumably they came into their wealth as his heirs.
Samuel E. Ewing was a son of Patrick Ewing (1736/37-1819) and Jane Porter (1739-1784).

Joshua Ewing, born on 2 May 1804, died on 3 August 1884 in Ewing in Lee County, Virginia. Joshua married Catherine Fulkerson (c1808-c1880). Joshua son of Samuel E. Ewing (1772-1851) and Mary Houston (1787-1842). Samuel son of Patrick Ewing (1737-1819) and Jane Porter (1739-1784). Patrick son of Joshua (1704-1753) and Jane Patton (c1710-1754).

Catherine E. Ewing, the daughter of Samuel E. Ewing, is not to be to be confused with "Catherine H. [Hannah] Ewing" (nee Fulkerson), the wife of Joshua Ewing the doctor, who owned real estate valued at $4000 on the 1850 census.

Two "Joshua Ewing" households are enumerated on the same sheet of the 1840 centus for Lee County, who I will call "Joshua Ewing A" and "Joshua Ewing B".

Joshua Ewing A
7 Free Whites 5 Slaves
Slaves - Males   - Under 10:   	2
Slaves - Females - Under 10:    1
Slaves - Females - 10 thru 23: 	1
Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35: 	1

Joshua Ewing B
6 Free Whites 5 Slaves
Slaves - Males -   24 thru 35: 	1
Slaves - Females - 10 thru 23: 	1
Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35: 	2
Slaves - Females - 55 thru 99: 	1

Joshua Ewing (1763-1843) married Rachel Craig (1765-1820) in 1788. This Joshua was a son of Patrick Ewing (1737-1819) and Jane Porter (1739-1789).

James A. and Mary A. (Baldwin) Thomas are no longer in Lee County in 1860. They are enumerated in the "First Sub-division" of the "County of Claiborne" in Tennessee, as "James A. Thomas" (33) and "Mary A." (32), with 6 children -- "Henry C." (15), "Elizabeth" (12), "Wm. H." (9), "Harvey C." (7), "Sarah E." (4), and "Susan J." (2). James A. is a laborer with real estate and personal property valued at respectively $100 and $235. Everyone was born in Virginia except Susan, who was born in Tennessee.

Schedule 4 of the 1860 census, concerning Productions of Agriculture in the Jonesville Virginia Post Office area of the Western District of Lee County, Virginia, Showed the following figures for the R.M. Bales, Joshwa [sic = Joshua] Ewing, and John R. Balwin [sic = Baldwin] households as of 1 June 1860. The three households are enumerated on lines 26-28 of pages 303-304. My transcriptions from Ancestry.com images. Some of figures are difficult to read, hence some of the transcriptions may be wrong.

1860 agriculture schedule

John R. Baldwin, R.M. Bales, and Joshua Ewing farms

Line                    36      37      38
                       R.M. Joshua  John R.
 1. Name of owner    Bales   Ewing  Baldwin
Acres of Land
 2.   Improved         500     200            Acres No acreage shown for John R. Baldwin here
 3.   Unimproved      1500     200            Acres No acreage shown for John R. Baldwin here
 4. Cash value farm   4000   10000            Dollars No "Value of Real Estate" on general census
 5. Value farm equip   300      50       3    Dollars
Live stock 1 June 1860
 6.   Horses            25      14       1    Number
 7.   Asses and mules    4       3            Number
 8.   Milch cows        36       7       3    Number
 9.   Working oxen       6       2            Number
10.   Other cattle      46       8       3    Number
11.   Sheep             65      46       5    Number
12.   Swine             80      35      14    Number
13. Value livestock  3,000   1,833     107    Dollars $157 "Value of Personal Estate" on general census     
Produce during year ending 1 June 1860
14.   Wheat            130      50      30    Bushels
15.   Rye                                     Bushels
16.   Indian corn     2000    1000     150    Bushels
17.   Oats             300     300      50    Bushels
18.   Rice                                    Pounds
19.   Tobacco                                 Pounds
20.   Ginned cotton                           Bales (400 pounds)     
21.   Wool              85     100      40    Pounds
22.   Peas and beans     2      10       2    Bushels
23.   Irish potatoes    30      20      10    Bushels
24.   Sweet potatoes    20      10       5
25.   Barley                                  Bushels    
26.   Buckwheat                               Bushels
27. Value of
      orchard products  50      10       5    Dollars
28. Wine                                      Gallons
29. Value of produce
      market gardens                          Dollars
30. Butter             500     500     100    Pounds
31. Cheese                                    Pounds
32. Hay                 20      10            Tons
33. Clover seed                               Bushels
34. Grass seeds                               Bushels
35. Hops                                      Pounds
Hemp                           
36.   Dew rotted                              Tons
37.   Water rotted                            Tons
38.   Other prepared hemp                     Tons
39. Flax                                      Pounds
40. Flaxseed                                  Bushels
41. Silk cocoons                              Pounds
42. Maple sugar                         25    Pounds John M. Baldwin produced maple sugar in 1850 
43. Cane sugar Hhds (1,000 pounds)            Hogshead 
44. Molasses                    25            Gallons
45. Beeswax             10                    Pounds
46. Honey              100              25    Pounds
47. Value of homemade
      manufactures      60      75      10    Dollars 
48. Value of animals 
      slaughtered      500     300      70    Dollars
R.M. Bales

R.M. Bales, a Rose Hill hog farmer, signed John M. Baldwin's 2 March 1855 last will and testament, according to a typescript copy of the will among documents found in an equity case raised in the Lee County Chancery Court in 1903-1905 (case 1905-043) concerning a claim by John M. Baldwin's great great granddaughter to 1/6th of the former "Milton Baldwin farm" in Rose Hill. See John M. Baldwin's will (below) for details.

Robert M. Bales -- also "Robt. M. Bales" and "R.M. Bales" -- was born on 5 May 1807 in Botetourt, Virginia, and he died on 26 June 1893 in Lee County, Virginia. His wife, Margaret W. Bales, was a daughter of ​Samuel E. Ewing (1772-1851), a son of Patrick Ewing (1737-1819) of Maryland. Samuel and two brothers, Nathanial Ewing (1759-1831) and Joshua Ewing (1763-1843), settled in the western district of Lee County, Virginia, and many descendants bear their names.

Robert M. Bales was appointed Rose Hill Postmaster at least twice -- from 14 February 1846 and from 17 December 1883.

Joshua Ewing

Joshua Ewing (1804-1884), a son of Samuel E. Ewing (1772-1851), was a medical doctor. His younger sister, Margaret W. Ewing (1817-1889), married Robert M. Bales (1807-1893) in Rose Hill on 23 February 1845.

REVISE EDIT Catherine Ann "Kitty" Ewing (Fulkerson) 1804–1869 Birth 1804 • Cecil, Maryland, USA Death 1869 • Russell, Virginia, USA Name: Catharine Ewing Age in 1870: 62 Birth Year: abt 1808 Birthplace: Lee; VA Dwelling Number: 508 Home in 1870: Rose Hill, Lee, Virginia Race: White Gender: Female Post Office: Jonesville Occupation: Keeping House Cannot Read: Y Cannot Write: Y Inferred Spouse: John Ewing Inferred Children: Mary Ewing BURIAL Name: Catherine Ewing [Catherine Fulkerson] Birth Date: abt 1809 Birth Place: Lee Co, Virginia Death Date: 18 Nov 1877 Death Place: Lee Co, Virginia Death Age: 68 Marital status: Married Gender: Female Father Name: John Fulkerson Mother Name: Jane Fulkerson Spouse Name: Joshua Ewing FHL Film Number: 32441 Name: Catherine Hannah Fulker Gender: Female Spouse: Joshua Ewing Child: William Dudley Ewing Catherine E. Ewing 1810–1877 Birth 1810 • Lee, Virginia, USA Death 18 NOV 1877 • Lee, Virginia, USA Samuel E. Ewing 1772–1851 Mary Houston 1787–1842 Spouse Jacob VanHook Fulkerson 1801–1884 Samuel E. Ewing 1772–1851 Birth 17 JUL 1772 • Cecil, Maryland, United States Death 27 OCT 1851 • Jonesville, Lee, Virginia, United States

Top  

John M. Baldwin's will

Lulu May (Baldwin) Postelwait vs. Francis Haley, 1905
John M. Baldwin's great-grandaughter inherits 1/6th of his farm
in Lee County Chancery Court case 50 years after his death

Baldwin will Baldwin will

Click on images to enlarge
John Milton Baldwin's last will and testament, dated and sealed 2 March 1855
1903 typescript copy of will as posthumously recorded on Monday, 19 November 1855
The above images, and images below except where otherwise stated,
are cropped from image files relating to equity case indexed as 1905-043 in the
Chancery Records Index of the Library of Virginia and Virginia Memory Digital Collections
(Search under Lee County for Defendant "Haley" / "Francis"

Note that "Wills 1895 John M Baldwin OF LEE CO" should read "Wills 1855 John M Baldwin OF LEE CO". There is no plat for the contested parcel of land, the site of the former "Milton Baldwin Farm". The tract is described by its fence neighbors, a more common practice at a time when "so many acres more or less" bounded by the farms of A, B, C, and X, Y, and Z substituted for precise surveying.

The 1905-043 index number signifies the year that the matters raised by the bill were resolved and the case was closed. The on-line file contains scans of 48 pages of documents. The scans can be viewed through the Virginia Memory, Chancery Records Index portal. They can also be downloaded in a zip file which somewhat inconveniently contains separate rather than bundled pdf files -- and pdf rather than jpg files. However, each of the zipped files can be opened at will in any recent version of Adobe Reader. However, each of the zipped files can be opened at will in any recent version of Adobe Reader. All images shown here are those I clipped as jpg files from the received pdf files.

Grubb deposition Grubb desposition

Click on images to enlarge
Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles's 21 August 1903 deposition taken in Indiana
The most important document in the case file other than John M. Baldwin's will

Complaint Complaint

Click on images to enlarge
Overview of Lulu May Postelwait's inheritance complaint

Summons

Click on images to enlarge

Above7 February 1903 court order
commanding Lee County sheriff
to summon Francis Haley to appear at
the Clerk's office of Lee County Circuit Court
on Monday, 16 February 1903,
"to answer to a bill in chancery, exhibited against her
in our said Court by Lulu May Postelwait, an infant who sues by E. M. Clark, her next friend"
See Legal issues below for what this means.

Upper rightLee County court decrees that
a commissioner will sell the plaintiff's one-sixth interest in the land owned by John M. Baldwin when it was sold first sold, after posting printed notices in the vicinity of the land and the court house.

Lower rightPublic notice dated 20 June 1904
advertising the sale on 23 July 1904, by auction in front of Lee County Court House, of

a one-sixth undivided interest in a tract of land containing 160 acres more or less, situated near Rose Hill Va, and being what is known as the "Milton Baldwin" farm, being the interest of the Plaintiff in said tract and being the land on which V.A. and Francis Haley now live.

The notice is signed by M.G. Ely, the commissioner responsible for selling the land and overseeing the payment of fees and commissions, and by the County Clerk, H.C.T. Ewing. Both family names are practically synonymous with Lee County west of Jonesville, centering on Rose Hill and Ewing on the way to Cumberland Gap.

The sale was a legal ruse to compensate Lulu May Postelwait for the value of the land that should have been hers, without requiring the Haleys to actually part with any of their property. They weren't deprived of one-sixth of their stock, but by owning only an "undivided five-sixths" of their land the value of their stock had dropped by one-sixth.

Ruling
Ruling
Deed Report on sale

LeftDeed to "Fide Bales farm" (former "Milton Baldwin farm")
as purchased 6 October 1898 by V.A. and Francis Haley

RightM.G. Ely's report on 23 July 1904 public sale of Postelwait's interest
Bought by the defendant, the only bidder, for $300 and fees
Haley thus bought 1/6th of the land she already owned
What would have happened if someone else had bid for it?
But why would anyone other than her have wanted to buy it?
What if Lulu May Postelwait had decided to bid on it?

Delayed birth certificate Death certificate

LeftLulu May (Baldwin) Murray's "Delayed Certificate of Birth"
Filed on 4 December 1953 for 27 January 1885 birth, certified copy issued on 10 December 1953
Cropped from copy provided by BJ Baldwin Rudder, "originally shared" by dianekay4487 on Ancestry.com

RightHarriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles died 16 July 1907 in Muncie, Delaware County, Indiana
John Moles, the informant on the death certificate, is probably her son. He was 9 years old when enumerated in Indiana on the 1870 census, which states that he was born in Kentucky. Apparently he did not know his maternal grandmother's name (Elizabeth) or where she was born (Virginia). His maternal grandfather was born in Virginia but his name was Archibald.
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com

John M. Baldwin's last will and testament

Witnessed 2 March 1855 by Robert M. Bales

Basis of Posterwait vs. Haley 1903-1905

Case 1905-043 concerns an "equity bill" brought to the Chancery Court of Lee County Virginia in 1903. The complaint was resolved in 1904 and the case was closed in 1905.

In some respects, the case was simple and elegant. A woman claimed to own 1/6th of a tract of land another woman thought she owned in whole. The latter ended up buying the former's "1/6th undivided interest" at a public auction in which she was the only bidder -- for precisely 1/6th of the amount she had paid for the land. So the land she originally purchased for $1500 ended up costing her $1800.

What is not so simple is that nearly half a century had passed since 1858, when the land -- originally owned by John M. Baldwin -- was sold by his heirs. Since then, it had passed through several owners -- apparently without any title objections from third parties, such as overlooked heirs. When the present owner and her husband purchased the parcel of land in 1898, they received a deed that seemed to make them its undisputed owners.

By 1903, the owner received a summons to appear at her local county court as a defendant in an equity matter in which the plaintiff, an 18-year-old woman, legally a minor, residing in another state, claimed through representatives, with the support of her paternal grandmother, that -- when the land was originally sold in 1858 in accordance with her greatgrandfather John M. Baldwin's will, her father, then a boy of 3 or 4, stood to recieve 1/6th of the land but hadn't.

Origin of inheritance matter

Case 1905-043 -- as it is called in the Library of Virginia, Virginia Memories, Chancery Records Index -- was an "equity bill" raised by the plaintiff, Lulu May Postelwait through her "next friend" [legal representative], against the defendant, Francis Haley, in the chancery court of the Circuit Court of Lee County, Virginia. The case appears to have been opened in early 1903 and closed in 1905. However, the plaintiff and her representative, an Oklahoma attorney, probably began putting together a strategy for pressing the bill in 1902.

Lulu May Baldwin (1885-1969) was born on 27 January 1885. Her mother, Phoebe Isabell "Bell" Williams (1857-1885), died half a year later, and her father, William L. Baldwin, born about 1854 in Lee County, Virginia, died on 20 January 1888 in Indiana. Lulu May Baldwin became the ward of J. B. Harris, apparently a court-appointed guardian, who bound her by contract as an "apprentice" [child indent1ure] to Robert Box (1842-1909), and Indiana farmer.

Box had been a friend of Lulu May Baldwin's parents, apparently closer to her mother and her mother's side of the family. The contract required that she live in Box's home and serve him in return for training and education that would prepare her for homemaking.

Children who had lost both parents, or at times even one parent, became orphans. And an early welfare practice was to apprentice them to homes where they would grow up learning skills. The master-servant relationship was not unlike that of a conventional parent-child relationship in that an indent1ured child was expected to be obedient and respectful.

The 1900 census for Burnham Township, Precinct No. 7, in Pawnee County in Oklahoma Territory, shows "Robert Box" (57), born Dec 1842, head of household, a farmer who rented his farm, with his wife "Emma C." (61), Dec 1838, and their "adopted daughter" "Lulu M. Baldwin" (15), Jan 1885. Robert and Emma had been married 42 years, but only 2 of the 6 children she had given birth to were still alive.

I would guess that the Boxes adopted Lulu May because they felt they needed a daughter to help around the farm. When they moved from Indiana to Oklahoma is not clear, but like many others, they probably migrated in the 1890s, after the territory was organized in 1890. Oklahoma Territory and Indian Territory became the state of Oklahoma in 1907.

Lulu May Baldwin's apprenticeship (indent1ureship) with Robert Box ended when she married Charles Postelwait (b1877) in 1901. She gave birth to her 1st daughter in 1902, and to her 2nd daughter in 1904 a few months after her inheritance matter was essentially resolved.

What prompted Lulu May Postelwait to seek redress for her father's inheritance is anyone's guess. I would wager that her paternal grandmother, Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles (1836-1907), the most important material witness, was the major impetus. As the wife of William Baldwin, John M. Baldwin's son, she was in a better position than any other witness to testify to the conditions that prevailed in the Baldwin household at the time of John M. Baldwin's death in 1855. As a member of the Grubb family, also, was familiar with the farming community in which the Grubb and Baldwin families had farmed fence to fence.

I would guess that Lulu May (Baldwin) Postelwait, born in Indiana, raised in Indiana and Oklahoma Territory, never set foot in Virginia. Other witnesses for the plaintiff, including Robert Box, and Lulu May's husband, who formally consented to his wife's legal action, also resided in Oklahoma Territory. Harriet Moles -- Lulu May Postelwait's paternal grandmother, John M. Baldwin's daughter-in-law -- though born in Virginia and raised mainly in Lee County -- resided in Indiana. So the case residents of localities outside the jurisdiction of the Lee County Circuit Court, which was obliged to hear the case because it concerned a will recorded in Lee County, regarding land in Lee County.

In 1903, Lulu May Postelwait filed, as plaintiff, an equity bill against Frances Haley, as defendant, at the Circuit Court in Lee County, Virginia, "by her next friend [legal representative] E.M. Clark" in the town of Pawness in Pawnee County, Oklahoma Territory, where the plaintiff, and her husband and her adoptive father, also resided. Her paternal grandmother, Harriet (Grubb, Baldwin) Moles, lived in Muncie, in Delaware County in Indiana. Pulling together all the depositions and other documents required to make her case required the cooperation of attorneys, county offices, and notaries in both Oklahoma Territory and Indiana. Only the defendant, Francis Haley, lived within the court's jurisdiction.

John M. Baldwin's farm

The equity bill sought either title to 1/6th of a 150-acre more-or-less parcel of land in Rose Hill in Lee County -- land then owned by Francis Haley -- or proceeds from a sale of 1/6th of the land. Haley and her husband resided on the land, which had once been owned by John M. Baldwin. Upon his death, and the death of his wife Elizabeth, the land had passed to John M. Baldwin's children or the heirs, including a grandson, namely Lulu May Postelwait's father.

While the case seems to have formally opened in the spring of 1903, there must have been earlier probes, because Francis Haley was summonned to appear at Lee County Court in February 1903. Depositions taken in Oklahoma are dated 24 April 1903. Harriet Moles's deposition in Indiana is dated 21 August 1903. Hearings were held in 1904, and that summer the Lee County Circuit Court issued a decree appointing a commissioner to sell the plaintiff's "1/6th undivided interest" in the defendant's parcel of land to the highest bidder at a public auction, the proceeds to go to the plaintiff.

Which is not to say that the court found the defendant guilty of committing a crime. She was not charged with any infraction. She was merely the passive victim of unaccountability.

The terms "plaintiff" and "defendant" label the initiator and recipient of an action, but the action is not necessarily an accusation by the plaintiff of wrongdoing on the part of the defendant. In the case at hand, the defendant had done nothing wrong and was not responsible for the plaintiff's grievance. Francis Haley was merely the present owner of land that had passed to John M. Baldwin's heirs, 4 adults and 2 minors, nearly half a century ago. The 4 adult heirs had sold the land, possibly without ensuring that the 2 minor heirs received their fair share of the receipts. Over the years, several others had owned the land, presumably unaware of the circumstances under which John M. Baldwin's heirs had sold it. Haley just happened to be the present owner. She could not be held responsible for damages the plaintiff might have incurred as a result of indiscretions that might have taken place when the land was first sold. Nonetheless, the plaintiff appeared to have a right to 1/6th of the land.

If the matter had been taken to a court of law, the plaintiff might have sued survivors among the 4 adult heirs who sold John M. Baldwin's farm, with failure to carry out the letter and spirit of his will, possibly with fraudulent intent to deprive the 2 minor heirs of their fair share of the inheritance. 2 of the 4 adult heirs, and the other minor heir, were still a live. They could have been traced and been compelled to testify as to what happened.

In an equity court, however, the plaintiff need only contend that they are due their fair share of an inheritance and let the court untangle the knots. And in the case of Lulu May Postelwait & etc. vs. Francis Haley, the court decreed that the plaintiff's share be sold in a public auction to the highest bidder. The buyer would acquire 1/6th "undivided interest" in the property -- but would not actually own any particular 1/6th of the land. It was tantamount to treating the land as so much stock, and offering 1/6th of the stock for open bidding.

The court recognized the impractibility of actually carving out Lulu May Postelwait's share of the land. Her 1/6th interest was an "undivided interest" -- not any particular 1/6th, but a virtual or fictional 1/6th of the whole. The court left the matter to a commissioner, who would put an undivided 1/6th interest in the farm up for sale, and ensure that fees and commissions were paid. The court set the bond for the sale at $300 and gave the buyer a year or two to make payment. Records show that Francis Haley paid roughly $34.94 in fees, including county fees and an "estimated" $15.00 attorney fee, and Lulu May Postelwait had received from Frances Haley, through the commissioner, $300 in payment for a fictional parcel of land amounting to 1/6th of the original tract -- namely, 1/6th of the $1500 that Frances Haley's father (deceased in April 1902) had paid for the parcel in 1898. This also appears to have been 1/6th of the amount that 4 Baldwin-Seale siblings, beginning with John R. Baldwin, had received from a sale of the undivided land in 1858, about 3 years after their father's death no later than November 1855.

Top  


John M. Baldwin will timeline

John M. Baldwin, in a "last will and testament" dated and sealed 2 March 1855, left his property to his wife, and upon her death to their children -- and to a grandson, William L. Baldwin, called "little William" in the will.

Little William's father, John M. Baldwin's son William Baldwin, had already passed away. And because John M. Baldwin in principle left everything to his wife, and equally to his children as his successors upon her death, he saw fit to specifically list "little William" as the rightful heir of his deceased son William Baldwin.

Those who, as of 2 March 1855, would inherit whatever was left of John M. Baldwin's legacy after Elizabeth's death, are as follows -- as listed in the latterday typescript of the will (see images to right).

John R. Baldwin [1]
Mary Thomas [2]
Sarah Grubb [3]
Harriet Baldwin [4]
Joseph Baldwin
Newton Baldwin [5]
Clinton Baldwin
Margaret B. Baldwin [6]
Grandson William Baldwin

The numbers in [brackets] are penciled above the names on the received typescript copy of the will. The original will was witnessed by "Robert M. Bales" and attested by "Presley C. Thompson" -- both Rose Hill, Lee County neighbors -- and entered into the record on Monday, 19 November 1855. Note that the typed copy, made in 1903 for the purpose of Lulu May Postelwait's equity bill, states "on Monday the 19th of November 1895". But this date was a Tuesday, whereas 19 November 1855 was a Monday. The point of recording the will on this date was to acknowledge that it was in fact a true will, as witnessed and attested to under oath. In other words, John M. Baldwin died some time after he dated and sealed the will on 2 March 1855 and before the will was posthumously recorded on 19 November 1855.

Top  


Robert M. Bales

Robert McMillan Bales (1808–1893), a witness to John M. Baldwin's will, was not just a neighbor but an uncle-in-law. Elizabeth M. Baldwin (bc1808-dnlt1858), nee Seale, was the daughter of "Fielding Seale" (1770–1838) and "Jane Seale " (1787–1841), nee Bales, an older sister of R.M. Bales by 20 years. Age-wise, R.M. Bales was more like Elizabeth's 1st cousin than an uncle.

I compiled the following list of the most plausible members of the Bales-Turner nuclear family of Jonathan Bales and Elizabeth Turner, using information from documents and what I judged to be the best researched family trees. Alternative information is shown in [brackets].

 0. Jonathan Bales        22 Mar 1761  20 Apr 1837
      Born Huntington, York Co, PA
      Died Martins Creek, Lee Co, VA
 0. Elizabeth Turner     20 April 1764       1820
      Also "Elizabeth McGuire"
      Also "Elizabeth McGuire Turner"
      Also "Elizabeth Turner McGuire"
        "Turner" may have been her father's name.
      Born Greenbrier Co, VA [later WV]
      Died Martins Creek, Lee Co, VA
    They appear to have married about 1784-1785.
    Both are buried in Jonathan Bales Cemetery in
      Edds Mill, Lee Co. VA, which is about
      2-3 miles south of Rose Hill and
      3-4 miles north of Martins Creek
 1. Esther Hattie         19 Oct 1785     Nov 1857
      Born York Co, PA, died Lee Co, VA
      Also listed as Esther "Hettie"
      Married  Robert McMullin
 2. Jane                  20 Sep 1787  21 Sep 1841
      Born York, York Co, PA
      Died Rose Hill, Lee Co, VA
      Married Fielding Seale (Sr) (1770-1838)
        Fielding Seale Sr and Jr buried in
        Old Fielding Seale Cemetery
        Rose Hill, Lee Co, VA
 3. Caleb                 14 Feb 1791   29 Mar 1870
      Named after paternal grandfather
      Born York Co, PA, died Hancock Co, TN
      Married Mary Bales (cousin)
 4. Vincent               18 Apr 1793  19 May 1876
      Born Botetourt Co, VA
      Died Martins Creek, Lee Co, VA
      Married Joanna Breedings
 5. Mary Polly            13 Oct 1795  17 Mar 1877
      Also just "Mary" or "Polly"
      Born Botetourt Co, VA
      Died Bales Mill, Lee Co, VA
      Married Josiah Markham (1790-1942)
6. Stephen J. [Jr]       10 Feb 1798  28 Jun 1866
      Born Botetourt Co, VA
      Died Bales Forge, Lee Co, VA
      Married Mary Jane Lock Lockmiller
 7. George              6?8? Apr 1800  13 May 1848
      Born Buchanan, Botetourt Co, VA
      Died Dana, Vermillion Co, IN
      Married Ann Bales (cousin)
 8. Elizabeth             16 Jan 1803   8 Feb 1880
      Born Botetourt Co, VA, died Lee Co, VA
      Married Harrison Edds [Eads]
 9. Robert M. [McMillan]   5 May 1808  28 Jun 1893
      Born Botetourt Co, VA
      Died Rose Hill, Lee Co, VA
      Married Margaret Ewing

Archibald Grubb (c1811-1852) married Elizabeth Wyrick (1809-1844) Wythe County, Virginia, on 11 April 1830.

The 1840 census for Lee County enumerated the households of Archibald Grubb (7 members), Jane Seal (2), and John R. Baldwin (4) on the same sheet.

1844   Elizabeth Wyrick, born on 17 August 1809 in Wytheville in Wythe County, Virginia, died in Rose Hill in Lee County in 1844.

The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County, virginia, shows "Archibald Grubb" (39) with his 2nd wife "Ann" (22) and 8 children -- 6 by his 1st wife, "Mary A." (19), "Lorenzo" (17), "Hariet" (15), "Elizabeth" (13), "John" (12), and "Catharine" (10) -- and 2 by his 2nd wife, "Martha J." 3 and "William" (1). Archibald and Lorenzo were farming on land valued at $800.

Top  


Fielding Seale

1810 census for Botetourt County in Virginia shows "Seal, Fielding" [sic] as the head of a household consisting of 5 members including himself -- all "Free White Persons" of the following ages by sex. The conjectured names and ages are mine.

      Male  Female  Totals  Conjectured names and ages
  0-9    1     2       3    John K. 1 (1809)
                            Harriet Emily 4 (1806)
                            Elizabeth 2 (1808)
 16-25         1       1    Jane 23 (1787)       
 26-44   1             1    Fielding 40 (1770)
 -------------------------
Totals   2      3      5
1 person engaged in agriculture.

"Fielding Seal" (Senior) married "Rebecca West" on 13 February 1798 in Culpeper County, Virginia, according to a Virginia marriage index. I assume she died and he then married Jane Bales, presumably by the 1810 census for Botetourt County in Virginia (see above).

Jane Bales, later Seale, was born on 20 September 1787 in York County, Pennsylvania, and she died in 1841 in Lee County Virginia. She last appears in the 1840 census for Lee County in her own household on the same enumeration sheet which shows the households of her son Fielding Seal (Junior), and the households of Gabriel Markham, Archibald Grubb, Martin Wyrick, and John M. Baldwin,

Fielding Seale (Senior) fathered the following children, presumably all with Jane Bales (unconfirmed).

Harriet Emily Seale (1806-1855) [Daniel Kelly]
Elizabeth Seale (1808- ntl 1858) [John Milton Baldwin]
John King Seale (1809-1900) [Theresa Chase]
Fielding Seale (1812–1885) [Rachael Napier, Elizabeth Rogers]
George Sanford Seale (1811-1881)
Mary Ann "Polly" Seale (1817-1881) [William Oaks]
Joseph William Seale (1817–1902)
James H. Seale (1822-1911) [Mary Ann Elizabeth,

The "Seal Fielding" in the 1830 census for the Western District of Lee County, Virginia is the "Senior" Fielding Seale, who dies in 1838. The "Fielding Seal" on the 1840 census for Lee County is his son, the "Junior" Fielding Seale, who was born on 16 June 1812 in Hawkins County, Tennessee, and died in 1885 in Lee County, Virginia.

The 1830 census for the Western District of Lee County in Virginia shows "Seal Fielding" [sic] as the head of a household consisting of 6 members including himself -- all "Free White Persons" of the following ages by sex. The conjectured names and ages are mine.

      Male  Female  Totals  Conjectured names and ages   
  5-9    1             1    William 10 (1829)
                            Sarah 7 (1833-09-02)
10-14    1     1       2    Joseph 13 (1817) 
15-19    1             1    
40-49          1       1    Jane 43 (1787)
60-69    1             1    Fielding 60 (1770)
--------------------------
Totals   4      2      6
1 person engaged in agriculture.

The 1840 census for Lee County shows a "Jane Seal" as the head of a household consisting of 2 persons including herself -- 1 male age 15-19, and 1 female age 50-59 (Jane 53, 1787). 1 person over 20 (Jane) cannot read or write.

Fielding Seale (Senior) appears to have suffered from severe rheumatism in his later years. The following account of the Seal(e) family in Lee County, Virginia, including Fielding Seal's petition for relief from license fees, was posted on Ancestry.com on 14 April 2014 by "rncorson", who sources the account to SPEAK/E/S Family Association Bulletin, Vol. 14, No. 2, March 1993, page 14, and Early Settlers of Lee Co., VA, page 999.

Fielding SEALE, Sr., head of the Lee Co. branch of the family, was born about 1770, according to the 1830 Census (age 60-70 in 1830). Fielding SEALE removed to Hawkins Co., TN, shortly after his marriage, where he remained until 1825. He appears in Lee Co., VA, in 1826, where on 15 Feb. 1826, he purchased 100 acres of land, lying on Martins Creek, from Josiah MARKHAM, who was his brother-in-law, for $200. Then 16 Sept. 1826, Fielding SEALE and another brother-in-law, Vincent BALES, obtained a patent for 100 acres, lying on Martins Creek, from the Commonwealth of Virginia. 5 March 1838, Fielding & Jane SEALE, and Vincent & Joanna BALES conveyed the grant from the Commonwealth to Cavender ROBINSON for $150, this tract of land lay below the lands of Absalom ROBINSON, William ELY and Philip DANIEL. On 30 Aug. 1830 Fielding SEALE purchased 200 acres, lying on Martins Creek in Powell Valley for $250. On 17 Feb. 1834, the court ordered that Fielding should be exempted from paying county levy and poor rates on account of his infirmity (see below). On 17 Jul 1838 Fielding & Jane SEALE conveyed 50 acres lying on the west side of Martins Creek, the place where Marlon FARRIS lived, adjoining HARDY's land, to Anthony ELY for $120. The deeds are of record in Lee Co., VA. Fielding died in 1838, after July 17. Jane survived Fielding by several years, but her death date is not known.

Lee Co., VA Legislative Petitions (1828): The Petition of Fielding Seal a citizen of Lee Co., VA, to the Honorable the General Assembly of the state of Virginia, humbly represents: "That your petitioner for the last 42 years has been entirely deprived of the use of both of his legs, occasioned by one of the most severe and obstinate attacks of the Rheumatism. In consequence of his afflictions, he is rendered almost entirely helpless, not being able to pass from one part of his house to the other, without aid and entirely incapable of leaving it without assistance. He has heretofore through the aid of his wife and children been able to afford himself and family a scanty maintenance. Old age having overtaken him and those of his family most serviceable having left him, has almost thrown him upon the mercy of the parish. Being unwilling, without one more struggle, to become an entire charge to his country, thinks he could yet through the aid of his friends and the indulgence of your honorable body, be able to afford himself and family a support. He threrefore prays that you will extend to him the privilege of peddling Goods without the payment of a License, at his own house And he as in duty bound will ever pray."

Fielding Seale, born in 1770, died in Rose Hill in Lee County, Virginia, in 1838. He is buried in Old Fielding Seal Cemetery in Rose Hill.

Early Settlers of Lee County

Among the cited the sources, neither of which I have seen, the following multi-volume work appears to be a very valuable source for students of the social history of 19th-century Lee County, Virginia.

Anne Wynn Laningham (compiler) [b1891]
Early Settlers of Lee County, Virginia and Adjacent Counties
Volumes 1 and 2
(Vol. 2 compiled by Hattie Byrd Muncy Bales)
Greenboro (NC): Media, Inc., 1977
xv, xxiii, 1275 pages, hardcover
There may be a 3rd volume
compiled by Hattie Muncy Bales

Robert M. Bales (c1810-1893) was the Rose Hill postmaster in 1846 and again in 1883 -- possibly also at other times.

The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County shows "Robert M. Bales" (40) with his wife "Margaret" (35) and 3 children. The Slave Schedule enumerates him as the owner of 5 slaves -- 4 black and 1 mulatto. The black slaves included a female (3), male (12), female (6), and male (4). The mulatto slave was a 20-year-old female. On the same sheet, Joshua Ewing had 7 slaves, Patrick Ewing 3 slaves, Nathanial Ewing 9 slaves, and Samuel Ewing (spilling over to the next sheet) had 30 slaves. The majority of the 159 slave owners had 1, 2, or 3 slaves, and the majority of the 787 slaves were owned by slave owners with from 1-8 slaves. See Slavery in Lee County (below) for details. No Baldwin or Grubb or Howell or Seale or Steele families in Lee County had slaves. Robert Margaret W. Bales was a Ewing, apparently a daughter of Samuel Ewing (see below).

The 1860 census for the Jonesveille Post Office area of the Western District of Lee County shows "R.M. Bales" (53) with his wife "Margret W." (43), 4 children, and 2 Ewing woman about Margaret's age. The same enumeration sheet shows the household of "John R. Baldwin" (31) and "Margret" (22). Both Margarets are spelled "Margret". John R. Baldwin's personal estate is valued at $154. R.M. Bales's real and personal estates are valued at $56,000 and $34,000. The estates of the 2 Ewing women in the R.M. Bales household, and of the Joshua Ewing family on the same sheet, are also very sizeable. The 1860 Slave Schedule lists "R.M. Bales" as the owner of 14 slaves -- 5 more than Joshua Ewing, whose household is enumerated between "R.M. Bales" and "John R. Baldwin" on the general census sheet.

The postbellum 1870 census for the Jonesville Post Office area of Rose Hill Township in Lee County, Virginia, shows the complex household of "Joshua Ewing" (65), a physician whose real and personal estates are valued at $8000 and $1000, with his wife "Catharine [Hannah Fulkerson] Ewing" (62) keeping house -- his daughter "Mary Ewing" (35) without occupation -- his son-in-law "H.R. Lind" (28) a minister, daughter "Sarah [nee Sarah Harriet Ewing] Lind" (26) keeping house, and granddaughter "Mary Lind" (6/12) -- "Cinda Lind" (35) domestic servant, "Alfred Lind" (13) works on farm, "Arildrey (?) Lind" (10) at home, "Lorena Lind" (7), and "Samuel Lind" (4). All are born in Lee County except H.R. and Sarah Lind, who were born in Rockbridge County, Virginia. Cinda Lind, and Alfred and Arildrey Lind, are unable to read or write. Everyone down to and including Cinda Lind are "W" (White), but the 4 Lind children listed after Cinda are "B" (Black) by "Color".

23 June 1845   Robert M. Bales (born 5 May 1808, died 28 June 1893) marries Margaret Whitehill Ewing (born 18 February 1817, died 8 April 1889).

The same 1870 census for Jonesville Post Office, Rose Hill, Lee County, shows the large household of "Robert M. Bales" (42), a general merchant whose real and personal estates are valued at $25000 and $5000, with "Margaret W." (54) keeping house -- his son "Caleb J. [Joshua] Bales" (21), an "Embro (?) Physician", and his wife "Adelia" [nee Adelia Ellen McLin] (24) house keeping -- his daughter "Harriet A. [Ann] Fulkerson [nee Bales]" (23) house keeping and her son "Charles W. Fulkerson" (12/12 1) at home -- and "James Seale" (31) Clerk in H[?], "Leticia Seale" (16) domestic servant, "Steam (?) Seale" (18) works on farm, "Catharine Seale" (14) domestic servant, and "Jane Seale" (20) domestic servant. All were born in Lee County, Virginia, except Robert M., who was born in Bontetonce County, Virginia, and Adelia, who was born in Washington County, Virginia. Leticia and Jane Seale are unable to read or write. Steam and Catherine Seale are able to read but cannot write. Everyone down to and including James Seale is "W" (White) by "Color". Leticia, Steam, and Catherine are "M" (Mulatto), and Jane is "B" (Black). Caleb Bales (1849-1914)and

Top  


Presley C. Thompson

Presley C. Thompson was born in Rose Hill or Ewing on 3 August 1834.

The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County shows "William Thompson" (48) with his wife "Catherine" (36) and 6 children -- "Presley C." (16), "Mariam" (14), "Sylvester" (13), "Johnathan" (11), "Elizabeth" (9), and "Ann E." (3). Both William and Presley are farming. There are no Thompsons on the 1850 slave schedule.

The 1860 census shows "Presley C. Thompson" (25), a clerk, living with a family in Estillville in neighboring Scott County, where his mother was born. On the 1870 census he is "Lesley C. Thompson" (36), farming with his wife Lucinda (32) and 2 children and a farm worker in Rocky Station Township of the Jonesville Post Office area of Lee County. The 1880 census shows "P.C. Thompson" (43) still in Rocky Station.

The 1900 census enumerates "Press C. Thompson" (66), a lumberman, born Aug 1833, living with "Lucinda" (62), born Mar 1838 in Bristol in Sullivan County, Tennessee, which is south of Scott and Washington counties, in Virginia, just to the east of Lee County. They had been married 39 years and 3 of her 5 children were still living. Presley (1834-1906) and Lucinda (1836-1906) both died in 1906 and are buried in East Hill Cemetery in Bristol.

Presley Carter Thompson's parents were William Thompson (1803-1883) and Catharine Porter (Carter) Thompson (1814-1889). Presley was named after his mother's father, Presley Carter.

The 1860 census for the Jonesville Post Office area of the Western District of Lee County shows "Wm. Thompson" (58), farmer, "Catharine P." (45), house keeper, "Mariam" (24), school teacher, "Sylvester" (23), farm laborer, "Elisabeth E." (18), "Anny E." (13), and "Joshua" (18), farm laborer, Henry Moley [sic = Morley] (52), farmer, and "Mariam Thompson" (60), house keeper, and several others, most of them "Moley" related.

Sylvester Thompson (1837–1916), Presley's younger brother, was born on 1 April 1837 in Rose Hill. He died on 18 September 1916 in Ewing and is buried in Morley Cemetery in Ewing in Lee County with his wife.

Lulu May alleged "that Margaret and Clinton Baldwin died before their Father John M. Baldwin, and that Joseph died after his father, and that they died without issue". She therefore contended that the surviving 5 siblings and her father, their nephew, in total 6 descendants -- were the rightful "heirs at-law" to the 150-acre parcel.

The following events then transpired.

  1. 2 March 1855   John M. Baldwin writes a last will and testament. It designates his wife Elizabeth as his primary heir, and upon her death his children as his secondary heirs -- and in the event a child had died, the child's lawful heirs. At the time, 8 of John M. Balden's children survived and he named them. 1 had died but had left a son, who John M. Baldwin also named as heir on a par with his surviving children.
  2. 19 November 1855   John M. Baldwin's will recorded, presumably shortly after his death. By this time, according to the deposition taken from Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles in 1903, Clinton and Margaret had died, and Joseph died shortly after that. Moreover, they left no heirs. So of the original 9 secondary heirs, only 6 people -- 5 surviving siblings and 1 grandson -- stood to inherit John M. Baldwin's farm. However, 1 of the 5 siblings -- Thomas Newton Baldwin -- was only 15. The grandson, William L. Baldwin, was only a few years old.
  3. 20 March 1858   Mary A. Thomas, John R. Baldwin, Sarah J. Grubb, and Harriet H. Baldwin -- the 4 adult heirs -- sold their "undivided interest" in the "Milton Baldwin farm" to F.H. Bales, who took possession of the whole farm.
    1. Whether the 4 adult heirs sold only their own interest totalling 4/6ths of the farm, or the entire farm intending to distribute 2/6ths of the proceeds from the sale to the 2 minor heirs, is not clear.
    2. The identity of "F.H. Bales" is unclear but there is a candidate. See Fidelio Hunt Bales (below) for details.
  4. Francis A. (Neff) Haley, born in September 1842 in Wythe County, Virginia, died in 1920 in Rose Hill, Lee County, Virginia. She is buried in the Old Haley Cemetery in Lee County. Her husband, Virgil Anderson Stewert "Vas" Haley, was born on 26 June 1839 in Pulaski County, Virginia. He died on 27 December 1914 in Rose Hill in Lee County and is buried at the Old Haley Cemetery. Find a Grave states that Francis A. (Neff) Haley was Virgil Haley's 2nd wife, his 1st wife being Mary Francis (Clements) Haley (1843–1919). ". Both wives are buried in the Old Haley Cemetery. His headstone states that he served in the "64th Inf Va / Confederate States of America". He is said to have been captured at Cumberland Gap, in Tennessee, immediately to the west of Rose Hill in Lee County, Virginia. The Find a Grave account states that he was sent to Camp Douglas in Chicago, Illinois, as a prisoner, and returned to Lee County after his release. The 1870 census shows "Virgil A.S. Haley" (29) living in Jonesville Township in the Jonesville Post Office area of Lee County with "Mary J." (23). The 1880 census shows "Virgil Haley" (41) living in Rose Hill Township in Lee County with "Francis" (35).
  5. 1886-1898   F.H. Bales died, and through a Chancery lawsuit in Lee County, Virginia, his creditors sold his land to John D. Morgan, who took possession of the land from about 5 December 1888. Morgan sold the land to Sanders and Sarah Spurlock on 5 October 1898, who the following day sold it to V.A. and Francis Haley for $1500. Francis Haley, to whom V.A. Haley conveyed his interest, took possession from 6 October 1898. The Haleys were residing on the tract -- estimated at "160 acres more or less" -- "Supposed to contain from 130 to 160 acres quantity not known the same not sold by the acre but by the boundary."

Lulu May did not know whether Newton Baldwin had sold his share of the land, but not withstanding his participation in its 1858 sale to F.H. Bales, she contended that, by law of descent and heirship, 1/6th of the land was her father's, and upon his decease should have come to her. She therefore demanded 1/6th of the parcel, but the court ruled that it would be impractical for Haley to partition and lay off part of the land for her. The was also the problem it its equivalent value considering its qantity and quality, and rents and profits had to be taken into account. In the end, though, Luly May Postelwait had to be content with a cash payment of $300 for her 1/6th of the land.

Lulu May claimed that after "the recent Civil war" (sic), her father, William L. Baldwin, had moved to Missouri and married, and she was born. Then her father died, and shortly afterward her mother died, leaving her their only heir. However, it appears that her mother may have died before her father.

Top  


Lulu May (Baldwin) Postelwait's deposition

3 April 1903

24 April 1903   Lulu May Postelwait makes a deposition before a notary public in Pawnee, in Pawnee County, Oklahoma Territory. She states she is 18 years old, which implies she was born around 1884-1885. She is residing in Pawnee County and is married to Charles E. Postelwait. They married on 28 October 1900, implying she was 15-16 years old. They have one child, a daughter, Verna Zell Postelwait, "borned August 29, 1902", therefore about 7 months old.

Lulu May had been living in Pawnee County in Oklahoma Territory for 4 years. Before she married, her name was Lulu May Baldwin and she had been living with Robert Box, for as long as she could remember, and she had no memory of either of her parents. She had come to Pawnee County directly from Mineral Springs in Barry County, Missouri, with Robert Box. She had always understood that her father was William L. Baldwin. She had knowledge of only one sibling, a sister "who died in infancy before I were born".

Top  


Robert Box's deposition

24 April 1903

24 April 1903   Robert box, in a deposition made in Pawnee before the same notary public on the same day, stated that he was then 60 years old, implying he was born around 1842-1843. He said that he had known Lulu May for over 18 years, that she had resided in his home "since a few days before she was five months old" and until 28 October 1900, the day she married. He had known her father and mother from the time they had moved to Mineral Springs in the spring of 1863, and had known her father until his death within 4 years later. He also said that her mother had died and he had raised Lulu May at her mother's request. Box said that Lulu May's father had come to Mineral Springs from Daid County, Missouri, but that he had come from Putnam County, Indiana. He said he "I knew Plaintiff's grandfather and two uncles on her mother's side, who all came with him from Indiana." The uncles still lived in Mineral Springs, he said, and one -- Ira A. Williams -- was then the town's postmaster. Robert Box recognied two "exhibits" which he had seen -- Exhibit A: a certificate of marriage between Lulu May's parents, and Exhibit B: a document given Box by a probate judge in Barry County shortly after Lulu May's father's death.

Exhibit A30 September 1881   Certificate of marriage of William L. Baldwin and Phoebe I. Williams in Putnam County, Indiana, pursuant to marriage license issued on 20 September 1881.

This implies that William and Bell migrated from Indiana to Missouri sometime after 20 September 1881.

Exhibit B18 February 1888   Approval by probate court of Barry County, Missouri, of indent1ure of guardianship executed on 17 February 1888 between J.B. Harris, Lulu May Baldwin's guardian, and Robert Box -- concerning Lulu May Baldwin, who had turned 4 on 27 January 1888 -- to "place and bind his [Harris's] ward Lulu May Baldwin as apprentice to the said Robert Box to learn the art of housekeeping with him . . . during the term of her minority or until 18 yrs of age . . . ."

This implies that Lulu May Baldwin was born on 27 January 1885, hence her age of 18 at the time she initiated the law suit.

Top  


Harriet (Grubb, Baldwin) Moles's deposition

21 August 1903

21 August 1903   Harriet Moles, nee Harriet Baldwin, nee Harriet Grubb, testified to the following points in a deposition taken in Muncie in Delaware County in Indiana.

Moles had been residing in Muncie for 11 years, before that in Carroll County, Indiana. She was then 67 years old and single, having married twice, first to William Baldwin, who died, then to Elihu H. Moles, who had also died.

Harriet Moles's maiden name was Harriet Grubb. She married William Baldwin on "May 26, 1856". Note that each character of this date is overstruck by "X", and pencilled between the typed lines is "About 52 or 53 years ago, I think." -- which suggests that they married around 1851 or 1852.

Harriet Moles says that she and William Baldwin were married in "Taswell [sic = Tazwell], Tennessee, which is in the county immediately joining Lee County, Virginia." Her father-in-law's name was "Milton Baldwin" and, after she and William Baldwin married, they resided "on the farm with his father, Milton Baldwin, in Lee County Virginia." They had one child, "William L. Baldwin", who was born in Lee County, and who in 1880 married "Bell Williams" in Putnam County, Indiana. They had two children, one of whom died in infancy, the other Lulu May Baldwin, who later -- Harriet says she had been told -- married a man named Postelweight [sic] and lives in Pawnee, Oklahoma [Territory].

Harriett Moles said she was born on 8 April 1836 in "With" [sic = Wythe] County, Virginia, but was raised in Lee County, Virginia. "My father's farm and the Baldwin farm joined. The Grubbs farm and the Baldwin farm joined. Milton Baldwin was the father of my first husband, William Baldwin, and William L. Baldwin was our son and he was the father of Lulu May Baldwin, now Lulu May Postelweight. I was a widow about four years and then I married Elihu H. Moles, May 26, 1856, and then we moved to Kentucky. Elihu Moles had been dead about 13 years.

Implicitly, William Baldwin died around 1852. Presumably they married in 1851, and William Baldwin died shortly before or after William L. Baldwin's birth.

Note that Tazwell is the county seat of Claiborne County, which is immediately south of Lee County. Today, a drive by car to Tazwell from from Jonesville, the county seat of Lee County, a distance of about 72 kilometers (45 miles) to the west and then south, would take about 50 minutes. The Grubb and Baldwin farms were in Rose Hill, west of Jonesville, about one-third closer to Tazwell via Cumberland Gap.

Top  


Contentions

The defendant (respondent), Francis Haley, claimed that, when she and her husband bought the farm in 1898, the plaintiff and her alleged father (who passed away on 15 August 1902), were harried by the statute of limitation before, or at the time of, the institution of this suit.

Top  


Court decree and sale

Forthcoming.

Top  


Legal issues

The legalese makes a distinction between "law" as practiced in an ordinary court of law, and "equity" as something sought in a "chancelry court" of the kind that heard Lulu May Postelwait's complaint. States in the United States vary considerably in how they deal with legal issues such as squabbles over inheritence. In California, an issue involving a trust would be heard in an ordinary court of law. In some states, like Virginia, they would be heard in a "chancelry court" -- aka "equity court" -- rather than in "law court".

The case at hand, officially "Postelwait & etc. vs. Haley", is an "equity bill" or "equity suit" rather than a "law suit". Postelwait is not alleging that Haley wronged her in any way and is therefore culcable for damages. Haley merely happens to own, and reside on, a tract of land that Postelwait claims is rightfully 1/6th hers.

"next friend"

"INFANT, a person under twenty-one years of age, whose acts are in many cases either void or voidable." (John Jane Smith Wharton, The Law Lexicon, Or Dictionary of Jurisprudence, London: Spettigue and Farrance, MDCCCXLVIII (1898), page 324, Google Books)

"NEXT FRIEND.At law, an infant having a guardian, may sue by his guardian, as such, or by his next friend, though he must always defend by one's guardian. In equity, he sues by next friend, not by guardian, and defends by guardian." (Ibid. Wharton 1898, page 453, highlighting mine)

"EQUITY [Æquitas], a department of the general system of laws; one of the great divisions of English jurisprudance. It is said to have arisen out of the peculiar and unbending severity of the common law, and to have relieved, after investigating the influences of accidents or frauds, in those cases where a strict interpretation at common law (not regarding such influences) would have produced injustice. . . ." (Ibid. Wharton 1898, page 223 ff, highlighting mine)

The court has not mistakenly assumed that 18-year-old Lulu May Postelwait was an "infant". The term referrs to someone who is under 21-years of age and was therefore not competent in some matters of law. Even if she was legally not an "infant", however, when suing in a matter that did not involve her husband but was exclusively hers, she would have been required to sue through a "next friend" -- i.e., a legal representative. An "infant" with a guardian may sue by either one's guardian or by a "next friend" but can defend oneself only by one's guardian. The distinction is made between a competent adult and an infant. No one can exhibit a bill (file a lawsuit) on behalf of a competent adult, as a next friend, without the consent of the competent adult -- whereas an infant's consent to file a bill is not required (ibid., pages 453-454). More precisely, an "infant" (a minor) may not be allowed to consent because in a matter in which the infant is viewed as having no legal competency.

So the question arises -- who actually took the inititiative? I would guess that it had to have been Lulu May Postelwait's paternal grandmother, Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles. But why then -- 45 years after the sale of John M. Baldwin's farm by his legally competent children?

John R. Baldwin was still alive. Even then, he could have been found. Thomas Newton Baldwin was himself a minor, as was William L. Baldwin, his nephew, Lulu May Baldwin's father. Presumably John R. Baldwin and his three sisters -- Mary A. Thomas, Sarah J. Grubb, and Harriet K. Baldwin (an adult by time her father died) -- acted on behalf of all six heirs. Presumably they had intentions of making sure that Thomas Newton Baldwin and little William would sooner or later receive their due share of the procedes from the sale of John M. Baldwin's farm.

So why an "equity" rather than a "law" case? At the time, Marry A. (Baldwin) (Thomas) Orton was dead. Sarah J. (Baldwin) Grubb was dead. Only John R. Baldwin and Harriet K. Mink were still alive.

"Equity" arguments prevail in disputes involving estates in which something didn't go according to a valid will or testament -- whether or not the parties to the distribution of a trust did something that could be prosecuted under common law as fraudulent.

Case 1905-043 as Netflix drama

Imagine a Netflix drama in which, one afternoon, the county sheriff drives out to the farm of V.A. and Francis Haley in Rose Hill, a few miles west of Jonesville, the county seat of Lee County, Virginia. He finds the Francis in the barn milking cows. She tells him that V.A. is plowing the back 40. They exchange a few pleasantries while we wonder why he's there, to to talk to her husband or seduce her. Then he pulls an official looking envelope out of his uniform blouse and hands it to her. It's probably nothing, he assures her, but she needs to appear at the county court in a few days regarding a claim to part of her land.

She appears at court and learns that a descendant of John M. Baldwin, who owned the farm until his death in 1855, claims that her father, who stood to inherit 1/6th of the farm, never sold his interest -- and so she, as his sole heir, rightfully owned 1/6th of the farm.

Whatever the merits of the claim, the court was obliged to hear the plaintiff's argument. And so Francis Haley, as the present owner, becomes the defendant.

She reads a typescript of John M. Baldwin's will, written on 2 March 1855 and witnessed by Robert M. Bales, a neighbor and slave owner. Bales's wife, Margaret, is the brother of another neighbor, Joshua Ewing, also a slave owner. Their father, Samuel Ewing, was a major slave owner in the Rose Hill area, and is the namesake of Ewing, a town just west of Rose Hill.

The will was recorded on 19 November 1855, apparently shortly after John M. baldwin died. And on 20 March 1858, the 4 adults among his 6 heirs sell his farm, corresponding to the land now owned by Frances Haley.

In the 2 March 1855 will, John M. Baldwin designates his wife, Elizabeth, as his primary heir, and their 9 children as secondary heirs when she dies. Since 1 of his 9 children -- William -- has already died, John M. Baldwin designates William's son, "little William", an heir in lieu of William. The grandchildren of the other children are also designated as tertiary heirs, in principle rather than by name. 5 of the 9 children are not yet married.

But between 2 March 1855 when the will is written, and 19 November 1855 when it is recorded (presumably after John M. Baldwin dies), the youngest children, Clinton and Margaret, die -- according to Harriet Mole's 21 August 1903 deposition. She also testifies that, shortly after John M. dies, Joseph dies without leaving issue. Harriet does not mention Elizabeth, the primary successor, but Elizabeth also must have died by the time the farm is sold on 20 March 1858.

In any event, by 1858, there are only 6 heirs -- John R. Baldwin -- 3 adult sisters, Mary A. Thomas, Sarah J. Grubb, and Harriet K. Baldwin (who has not yet married) -- and 2 minor males, John R. Baldwin's younger brother Thomas Newton, who has been orphaned and is living with John R. and Margaret Baldwin, and "little William", their nephew, the son of William Baldwin, who died shortly before John M. Baldwin wrote his will.

Thomas Newton Baldwin is 14 or 15, and Little William (William L. Baldwin) is 3 or 4, when the 4 adult heirs sell the farm in 1858. Presumably, John R. Baldwin and his sisters take the interests of the 2 minor heirs into account. Presumably they distribute the proceeds in some way that carries out the wishes of John M. Baldwin that everything be divided as equally divided as possible, but with serious provisos. In particular, item 3 expresses his desire that "if any more of my children should marry that my wife Elizabeth Baldwin would fit them out for house-keeping as nearly as possible like those that have married previous, but if her property will not admit of it they can arrange to make it equal in the final account."

At the time of his John M. Baldwin's death, John R. Baldwin has probably benefited more from his father's property than any other sibling. Mary Ann Thomas and Sarah J. Grubb have probably also received some material help from their father when they married. Harriet K. Baldwin wouldn't marry until 1861. Thomas Newton Baldwin wouldn't marry until 1865 shorly after the Civil War.

William's widow, Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin, remaried a man named Elihu H. Moles on 26 May 1856. This was nearly 2 years before John M. Baldwin's farm was sold on 20 March 1858. Was Elizabeth still alive? Did she extend material help to her daughter-in-law and her new husband, on behalf of her "little William" grandson?

By the 1860 census, Harriet Moles and "Wm. L. Moles" were residing in Lincoln County, Kentucky. After William's death, Harriet may have stayed in the Baldwin home, or may have returned to her natal Grubb family, a fence neighbor. But I would guess that, when she remarried Elihu Moles, Harriet and Elihu made every effort to leave the Grubb and Baldwin nests in favor of independence. And I would they did so before the Milton farm was sold.

John R. Baldwin and his sisters most likely assumed that "little William" -- who is "Moles" on the 1860 and 1870 censuses, and does not become "Baldwin" again until the 1880 census -- will be taken care of.

Regarding the welfare of Thomas Newton Baldwin, John R. and Margaret Baldwin may have taken him into their family even before Elizabeth died, which must have been before John R. Baldwin and his sisters sold the Milton Baldwin farm in 1858. Elizabeth had to have been depressed at the loss of so many members of her family in just a few years -- 3 of her children and a daughter-in-law, then her own husband and possible a 4th child. I would guess that a bug was going around, and it caught up with Elizabeth -- but not Thomas Newton Baldwin.

The most important "story" to be distilled from the informationin Harriet Mole's deposition is that the Baldwin-Seale nuclear family -- 11 members strong on the 1850 census -- has been cut down to 5 members plus a grandson representing the heir of one of the deceased siblings. The deaths take place between roughly 1853/4 - 1857/8.

Rebecca's death on 3 April 1855 came in the middle of this period. And barely 2 months later, on 13 June 1855, John R. remarried her sister Margaret. The extended Baldwin-Seal family is fighting for its collective life.

The present catches up with the past

Then nearly half a century later, the present catches up with the past, so to speak. In 1903, Little William's daughter, not born until 1885, is married but still a legal minor. And through a "next friend" or legal representative, she raises an "equity bill" in Lee County from distant Oklahoma Territory, demanding that she be given a physical 1/6th of the former Milton Baldwin farm -- or the proceeds of the sale of "1/6th undivided interest" in the farm. The present owner is the 4th in a succession of owners, and she bought the property, as I would guess other owners bought the property, thinking they were buying the entire property. No proviso in the deed limits her ownership to less than 100 percent. There appears to be no other evidence that John R. Baldwin and his three adult sisters sold only their collective 4/6ths and not the 1/6th owned by Thomas Newton Baldwin or the 1/6th owned by Little William or his heir.

Notwithstanding all the apparent due diligence and good faith in the chain of ownership over the decades, the Lee County Court found reason to assume that -- whatever the circumstances of the original sale in 1858, and apart from whether John R. Baldwin and his adult sisters took into account the interests of the two minor heirs -- Little William did not in fact sell his share. Therefore his daughter, Lulu May Postelwait, is the rightful owner of 1/6th of the property.

Undivided interest

Such arguments can prevail in an equity court, which is not obliged to apply the strict and sometimes harsh logic of common law. The Lee County court recognized the impracticality of carving out a physical 1/6th of the farm, and so it appointed a commissioner to sell "1/6th undivided interest" -- which is like selling stock in a company -- you own a percentage of the farm, but nothing with specific boundaries.

The public auction of "1/6th undivided interest" is advertised for 30 days, and the auction is held at the Court House on 23 July 1904 -- and of course the only bidder is the defendant -- the present owner -- who bids 300 dollars, the value of the bond she posted on the "interest" being sold -- which happens to be exactly 1/6th of the $1500 she and her husband paid for the property. Who in their right mind would bid against her?

Seen from the viewpoint of equity law, the public auction of "1/6th undivided interest" in the Milton farm, nearly 50 years after it was sold in whole, was a legal ruse taken in the name of "fairness" or "conscience". I can imagine another scenario, in which John R. Baldwin, Harriet K. (Baldwin) Mink, and even Thomas Newton Baldwin -- all of whom were still alive -- were traced and compelled to testify -- but that didn't happen.

Only Lulu May Postelwait's grandmother -- John M. Baldwin's daughter-in-law Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles -- is depositioned. The costs of tracing and depositioning others was probably prohibitive. As it was, the case involved people in 3 different states.

Did the "defendant" lose sleep wondering when Thomas Newton Baldwin might file an equity bill in Lee County's chancery court for his "1/6th undivided interest"? Had he made such claim, she might have aruged that he had received more than an equivalent amount in the form his older brother's guardianship -- end of case.

I'm submitting this drama to Netflix. I figure it's worth at least one season.

Top  


Phoebe Bales Headstone of Phoebe Bales, wife of Fidelio H. Bales
Lummi Cemetery, Whatcom County, Washington
Photograph by Love never dies copped from Find a Grave

Fidelio H. Bales

In her contention that she was the rightful heir to 1/6th of the farm left by her paternal grandfather John Milton Baldwin, Lulu May (Baldwin) Posterweight contended that, on 20 March 1858, Milton Baldwin's adult children had sold his farm to F.H. Bales, who had taken full possession, then "Bales died about the year 1886, and said lands were sold by the creditors of Bales in a Chancery suit in the Circuit Court of Lee County, by C.T. Duncan, Commissioner, at which sale John D. Morgan became the purchaser, . . ." (see copy of document above).

Who were "F.H. Bales" and "John D. Morgan"?

  1. The 1850 census for the 33rd Subdivision of the Eastern District Hancock County in Tennessee shows "Archabel Bails" [sic = Archibald Bales] (60) with "Polly" (52) and 7 children -- "William P." (23), "Fidillow [sic = Fidelio] H." (26), "Roda" (20), "John" (18), "Caleb E." (13), and "Thomas L." (7). Archibald is a farmer. William, married, is a miller. Fidelio and John are larborers. Roda cannot read or write. Two large "Bails" households are enumerated immediately after this household, and another "Bails" family on the following page.
  2. The 1850 census for the 7th Subdivision of the Eastern District of Claiborne County in Tennessee shows the household of "Joseph Niel" (75) and "Nancy" (64) with 2 children, "Nancy" (25) and "Phebe A ." (21). The parents were born in Virginia, the children in Tennessee.
  3. 15 February 1853   A scan of an original manuscript marriage roll reads "Marriage Licence Isd [issued] 15th Feb 1853 to Fidelio Bales for his Entermarriage with P A [P.A.?] Neil" -- apparently in Claiborne County in Tennessee.
  4. The 1860 census for the Jonesville Post Office area of the Western District of Lee County, Virginia, shows the household of "Fidelio H. Bales" (30) with "Pheby A.J." (31) and "Cornelia E." (2). Fidelio is a farmer with real and personal estates worth precisely $1273 and $914. Pheby is a housekeeper. Both were born in Claiborne County in Tennessee, and Cornelia was born in Hancock County in Tennessee. Claiborne County is immediately south of the Jonesville area of Lee County. Hancock County is immediately west of Claiborne County and also shares part of the southern border of Lee County.
  5. 1870 census   I cannot find a record for the Bales-Neils family in this census.
  6. 13 April 1875   A transcription of a Virginia death record shows that "Fidele H. Bales", male, born about 1823 in Hancock County, Tennessee, died on 13 April 1875 in Lee County, Virginia, at age 52. His father was "Arch" and his mother was "Polly". The transcription of another death record shows that a "Fedelo H. Bales", a white male farmer, born about 1843 in Hancock [County], Tennessee, died on 13 April 1875 in Lee [County], Virginia, at age 32. His father was "Arch", his mother was "Poley", and his spouse was "Pheby Bales".
    1. One family tree claims that "Fidelio Hunt Bales (1817–1875)" was born on 27 Jun 1817 in Hancock County, Tennessee and died on 13 Apr 1875 in Hancock County, Tennessee. His parents are given as "Archibald Bales" (1787–1861) and "Mary (Polly) Henderson" (1792–1871). His spouse and oldest of 4 children were shown as "Phoebe Bales" (1829–1908) and "Cornelia Elizabeth Bales Barron" (1857–1918).
    2. Another family tree shows his name as "Fidella Fide Hunt Bales".
    3. Yet another tree shows the same 27 Jun 1817 and 13 Apr 1875 birth and death dates for a "Joseph Fidelio Bales" -- a highly unlikely coincidence.
  7. The 1880 census for Precinct No. 3 of Palo Pinto County, Texas, shows "Phebe [sic] J. Bales" (51) as the mother-in-law of "Virgil C. Botsford" (37), married to her 2nd daughter "Rusilia [sic] E. Botsford" (20), their 1st daughter "Emma C. Botsford" (7/12, born Aug 1879), and her 3rd daughter "Addie L. Bales" (13). Phoebe is a "Wd" (widow) and has no occupation. She was born in Kentucky, her daughters in Virginia.
  8. The 1900 census for Weatherford City in Justice Precinct No. 1 of Parker County in Texas shows "Phoaba [sic] J. Bales" (70, born Feb 1829) living with her 2nd daughter "Russellia [sic] Batsford" (39, Dec 1860) and son-in-law, a farm laborer, and their children, and her 3rd daughter "Addie Bales" (32, Aug 1867). Both she and her 3rd daughter are "S" (single). Phoebe was born in Tennessee to Tennessee-born parents, and both of her daughters were born in Virginia to Tennessee-born parents.
  9. 4 April 1908   Phoebe Ann Jane (Neil) Bales, born in Tennessee on 19 February 1828, died on 4 April 1908 according to her Find a Grave memorial, which does not give a place of death. She is buried as "Phoebe J. Bales / 1828-1908" in Lummi Island Cemetery in Lummi Island, Whatcom County, Washington. The memorialized birth date differs from the "Feb 1829" date reported on the 1900 census.
    1. One family tree states that Fidelio H. Bales's wife was "Phoebe Ann Jane Neil", and that she was born 19 Feb 1828 in Claiborne County, Tennessee, and died 4 Apr 1908 in Bellingham in Whatcom County, Washington.
    2. Another family tree calls her "Phoebe Anne Jane Neil" and says she was born on 19 Jan 1829 in Claiborne County, Tennessee, and died on 4 Apr 1908 in Lee County, Virginia.

Top  


Morgan 1916 birth certificate for John William Henry Morgan shows mother's name as Weir
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Morgan 1944 marriage certificate for J. W. H. Morgan and Martha Sue Cain shows mother's name as Weir
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Morgan 1957 death certificate for John William Henry Morgan shows mother's name as Weirs
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Morgan Morgan
Morgan

Tombstones of father John D. Morgan, son John W. H. Morgan, and daughter-in-law Martha Sue (Cain) Morgan
Morgan Cemetry, Rose Hill, Lee County, Virginia
Photographs by Phillip Cheek copped from Find a Grave

John D. Morgan

The identity of "John D. Morgan" -- the man who reportedly bought the Milton Farm from F.H. Bales -- also remains unconfirmed.

The following John D. Morgan is easily traced in Lee County. He was a medical doctor, as was his older brother, and as was his only child -- a son he sired late when 77 years old with a 30-year-old woman.

  1. 1 November 1839   John Davis Morgan is born in Rose Hill in Lee County, Virginia, to on
  2. The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County, Virginia, shows "Nathan Morgan" ( 50) with "Martha" (50) and 3 children -- "William" (16), "Benedict M." (14), and "John" (11). Nathan's estate is worth a considerable $4300. Nathan and William are farming. Nathan was born in Tennessee, everyone else in Virginia.
  3. The 1860 census for the Western District in Lee County, Virginia, shows the household of "Nathan Morgan" (60) and "Martha" (62) with 2 children -- "Benade N." (24) and "John D." (20). Nathan is a farmer who owns real and personal estates valued at $4000 and $2449 -- substantial amounts. Martha is a housekeeper. Benade is a school teacher with a personal estate of $135. John is a farm laborer but attended school during the year previous to the census. Nathan was born in Tennessee. Martha and the children were born in Lee County.
  4. 27 September 1862   20-year-old farmer "James D. Morgan" enlisted in Lee County, Virginia, in Company G, Virginia 25th Cavalry Regiment, a Confederate unit,. William H. Moles, husband of Nancy Ann (Markham) (Grubb) Moles, enlisted in Company I of the same regiment on 18 April 1863, but was captured by Union forces at Jonesville on 5 October 1863, and died of smallpox in captivity at Rock Island, Illinois.
  5. The 1870 census for District 8, Hancock, Tennessee shows "J. D. Morgan (27), a physician, residing in the household of "Calvin Coleman" (39), "Julia Ann" (38), "Newton" (8), "Andrew Coleman" (44), and "Amdia Coleman" (23). Calvin is a farmer, Julia Ann is keeping house, and Amdia is a domestic servant. Andrew can neither read nor write and is classified as "idiotic". Everyone was born in Tennessee except John. Everyone is "W" (white) except Amdia, who is "B" (black) by "Color or race".
  6. The 1880 census for Rose Hill Township of Lee County, Virginia, shows "John Morgan" (40), single, a phyisician, with his mother "Martha Morgan" (83), a widow, and a cousin "Matilda Brown" (35), a house keeper, single. John was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents. His mother was born in Virginia to a Pennsylvania-born father and Wales-born mother. Matilda was born in Tennessee to Virginia-born parents.
  7. The 1900 census for the Rose Hill Magisterial District part of Bales Forge Voting Precinct shows "J. D. Morgan" (60), born Nov 1839, a physician, single, with 2 single cousins -- "Matilda Brown" (60), born Nov 1839, a house keeper, and "Amanda Wires" (30), born 1870. John and Matilda were born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents. Amanda was born in Virginia to Tennessee-born parents. John is residing on a farm he owns free of mortgage.
  8. The 1910 census for the Rose Hill Magisterial District of Bales Forge Precinct of Lee County, Virginia, shows him as "John D. Morgan" (66) [sic = 70], single, working as a physician, on his own account. He owns his farm free of mortgage and is a "CA" (Confederate Army) veteran. There are two other in the household -- "Matilda Brown" (70), single, a housekeeper in a private family, and "Ida J. Wares" [sic = Wires] (29) [sic = 24], single, a cook in a private family. John was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents, Matilda in Tenessee to Virginia-born parents, and Ida in Tennessee to Tennessee-born parents. Matilda can read but not write.
  9. 19 May 1912   Two slightly different transcriptions of a marriage record show that "John D. Morgan", widowed (sic), 69 [sic], born in Lee County, Virginia, in 1843 [sic], father Nathan, mother Patsie, married "Ida J. Warer" ("Ida J. Wares") [sic = Wires]. She is 26 and he is 72, computed according to their most likely birth dates.
  10. 1 December 1916   John D. Morgan, a physician and farmer, attends and certifies the birth of his own child, a boy, John William Henry Morgan, born to himself, 77, and his wife Ida Jane Wires, 31 -- ages which, as stated on birth certificate, conform to their most likely birth dates.
  11. The 1920 census for the Rose Hill Magisterial District part of Lee County, Virginia, shows "John D. Morgan" (80) with his wife "Ida J. Morgan" (35) and their son "John W. H. Morgan" (3).
  12. 8 April 1924   John D. Morgan dies of "senility", according to a database of deceased American physicians, which states that he was born in 1841 [sic] and was a practioneer of "allopath" (as opposed "osteopath" and "homeopath") last licensed to practice in Rose Hill on 23 May 1913 (information attributed to JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical Association). Dr. John Davis Morgan (1839-1924) is buried as "John D. Morgan / Nov 1, 1839 / Apr 8, 1924" in Morgan Cemetery in Rose Hill, Lee County, Virginia. His Find a Grave memorial states that he was born and died in Rose Hill. A biographical comment on Find a Grave reads as follows (unedited cut and paste from Find a Grave).
    1. "Son of Nathan Morgan and Martha Yeary. Dr Morgan was born on the family farm. He was mentored in medicine by his brother William, and attended the distinguished William Emory & Henry College and Medical School. he served as the community physician for many years. Dr. John D was a generous benefactor of the Rose Hill Methodist church. Husband of Ida Jane Wares of Lee County and father of Dr. John William Henry Morgan.""
  13. Several of John D. Morgan's immediate family members, including his parents and mentor brother, are also buried in Morgan Cemetery. The Find a Grave memorial for William T. Morgan (1833-1879) reads as follows (unedited cut and paste from Find a Grave).
    1. "Physician of Rose Hill and Regimental Surgeon for the Confederate Army, Company S of the Virginia 64th Infantry Regiment.
      Born on a farm in Rose Hill, the son of Nathan Morgan and Martha Yeary, Dr. Morgan attended the distinguished William Emory & Henry College and Medical School. During the Civil War, Dr. Morgan served as surgeon to his Virginia regiment for the length of the war and was witness to many horrific battles, including Gettysburg and Missionary Ridge.
      Dr Morgan married 1st to Martha Jane 'Jinnie' Gibson in 1869. Following Jinnie's untimely death he married 2nd in 1879 Mollie Wheeler. He had 2 children both died at birth."
  14. The 1930 census for Middlesboro City in Bell County, Kentucky, immediately to the west of Lee County, Virginia, shows "Ida J. Owens" (43) as the wife of "George Owens" (43), the proprietor of a retail grocery. "John Morgan" (13) is listed as his step son. Ida Jane Morgan -- left a widow and mother of a 7-year-old son at age 37 in 1924 -- has remarried George Owens, who was her own age, in what apparently was also his 2nd marriage. George fostered Ida's son until his death in 1937 again left her a widow. Ida's son became a doctor like his biological father, in 1957 he appears to have taken his own life, and 2 years later his wife died. Ida outlived her son by a decade.

Top  


Ida Jane Wires (Wares, Weirs, Weir)

  1. 5 January 1886   Ida Jane Wires (Wares, Weirs, Weir) was born in Lee County, Virginia.
  2. The 1900 census for Bales Mill Precinct shows her as "Ida" (15), born Jan 1885 [sic = 1886], in the household of her parents, John Wires (42) born May 1858, and Elizabeth Wires (25) [sic = 47 if] born Feb 1853 -- both born in Tennessee.
  3. The 1910 census enumerates the household of Ida's parents, "John F. Wires" (55) and "Elizabeth" (55), on the same Lee County sheet with the household of John D. Morgan (66) [sic = 70], which includes "Ida J. Wares" [sic = Wires] (29) [sic = 24] as a cook.
  4. The 1920 census for the Rose Hill Magisterial District part of Lee County, Virginia, shows "John D. Morgan" (80) with his wife "Ida J. Morgan" (35) and their son "John W. H. Morgan" (3).
  5. The 1930 census for the East End of Middlesboro City in Bell County, Kentucky, shows "Ida J. Owens" (43) remarried to "George Owens" (43). "John Morgan" (13) is listed as his step son. George first married when he was 20, and Ida first married when she was 26, which implies that he first married about 1907 and she about 1913. Apparently their marriage was the 2nd for both. George was the proprietor of a retail grocery, and he owned the home in which they resided, valued at $2000. But Ida was widowed again when George died in 1937.
  6. 23 March 1936   The death certificate for "Elizabeth Longsworth Weirs" of Rose Hill, spouse of "John Weirs", states that she was 81 years old at the time of her death on 23 March 1936 -- which implies that she was born about 1855. The informant was her son-in-law, George Owens, of Middlesboro, Kentucky. She was scheduled to be buried at Gibson Station by a Middlesboro undertaker. Gibson Station in Lee County near Cumberland Gap, west of Rose Hill, and east of Middlesboro, which is on the Kentucky side of Cumberland Gap.
  7. 19 April 1937   George W. Owens, born on 9 September 1885, dies in Middlesboro in Bell County, Kentucky. He is buried in Middlesboro Cemetery.
  8. 4 March 1939   Ida's father died in Middlesboro. His death certificate, informed by his daughter "Mrs. George Owens", states that "John Floyd Wares" died of "Senility" in gave "Age" was as a contributory cause. He was born in Tennessee, had been a farmer, and was about 84 years old when he died the widowed spouse of Elizabeth Longsworth. He was slated to be buried somewhere in Ewing in Lee County, Virginia.
  9. 18 November 1944   "J. W. H. Morgan", 27, a physician residing in Ewing in Virginia, marries Martha Sue Cain, 21, of Harrisville, West Virginia, in Ewing, according to a certificate issued by the Circuit Court of Lee County, Virginia. The certificate shows Morgan's parents' names as "John Davis Morgan" and "Ida Jane Weir".
  10. 30 May 1957   "John William Henry Morgan" dies in Rose Hill. His death certificate, informed by his wife Martha Sue Morgan, states that he was a doctor in general practice. His parents were "John Davis Morgan" and "Ida Jane Wares". Thomas S. Ely, M.D., Coroner, certified the cause of death as "Overdose of Barbituates" and added "Apparently took too much barbituate while alone at home". Morgan was slated to be buried at Morgan Cemetery in Rose Hill.
  11. 9 October 1924   Martha Sue Morgan, a registered nurse, born on 9 October 1924 in Harrisville in Ritchie County, West Virginia, died in Rose Hill in Lee County, Virginia, at age 35, leaving a daughter, Susanne.
  12. 23 March 1936
  13. 23 April 1967   Ida dies 30 years after she is again widowed. She is buried at Middlesboro Cemetery in Middlesboro, in Bell County, which is immediately west of Lee County on the Kentucky side of Cumberland Gap.

Top  


Bales-Morgan warrant Database record for military warrant issued on 10 December 1859
to "Fidelio H. Bales" as patentee and "John Morgan" as warrantee

Screen captured from Government Land Office Records, Bureau of Land Management, Department of Interior

Military land warrants

Fidelio H. Bales and John Morgan

"Fidelio H. Bales" is associated with "John Morgan" on a record of a military land warrant issued in Missouri in 1859. Are these the "F.H. Bales" and "John D. Morgan" who successively bought the Milton farm in Lee County, Virginia?

The General Land Office Records (GLO Records) webpage of the Bureau of Land Management of the U.S. Department of Interior provides access to some but not all Federal land title records. The most valuable records for family histories involve "land patents", which are transfers of land titles from the Federal government to individuals.

A search of GLO Records for "Fidelio H. Bales" shows that on 10 December 1859, he was issued a military bounty land warrant for 160 acres of land in Missouri by the land office in Warsaw, Missouri, pursuant to the Scrip Warrant Act of 1855 (10 Stat. 701) enacted on 3 March 1855. The warrant was issued in recognition of his service in "Captain Andersons Company Virginia Militia" -- presumably during the Mexico War of 1846-1848.

The 160-acre parcel of land -- equivalent to a quarter of a section (640 acres) -- was defined by 4 aliquots -- each 1/4th of a quarter section in the corners of 4 contiguous sections in Vernon County, Missouri (see right).

Two names are listed on the record -- Fidelio H. Bales as "patentee" -- and John Morgan as "warrantee". The patented land is described as the product of a "military warrant" -- which suggests a military bounty land grant -- land granted as a reward for military service in a war.

An article titled Bounty-Land Warrants for Military Service, 1775–1855, posted by The National Archives and Records Administration, begins as follows (viewed 23 March 2020).

From 1775 to 1855 the United States granted bounty-land warrants for military service, primarily to encourage volunteer enlistments, but also to reward veterans for service during the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Mexican War, and a variety of Indian wars, Indian removals, and other military actions during the 1850s. Early warrants could only be used in military districts, principally in Ohio and several other public land states in the former Northwest Territory. Eventually, Congress expanded eligibility to include service in the Regular Army and the Navy, as well as volunteer militias.

Bounty-land warrant files can contain supporting documents such as statements and signatures of witnesses. Bounty-land warrants generally do not contain as much personal information as the pensions. The Government ceased issuing bounty-land-warrants after 1855.

The records are part of Record Group 15, Records of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

However, the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) at the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan posted the following overview of mid-18th century federal land warrants, attributed to James W. Oberly, Military Bounty Land Warrants in the United States, 1847-1900, Department of Interior, 17 February 1992 (highlighting and underscoring mine).

Between 1847 and 1855 the Congress of the United States passed four land warrant acts which granted 60 million acres of land to veterans and their heirs. The Pension Bureau determined the eligibility of these individuals and issued military bounty land grants for up to 160 acres. Most of these land warrants were issued before 1860, but the government continued to make grants through the remainder of the 19th century. Because of these Congressional acts approximately one in nine U.S. families received a land warrant for earlier military service. Families usually sold their warrants for cash to third parties who then presented them to the General Land Office as payments for parcels of public land. Variables include the number of acres awarded to the warrant recipient, the conflict in which the veteran served, his wartime military rank, his state of residence, the public land office where the warrant was located, the year the warrant was issued, and the type of military unit in which the veteran served. Information is also provided concerning the ability of the recipient to sign his name, the relationship of the recipient to the original veteran, whether or not the grant had been sold, and, if so, the name of the buyer.

How land warrants and patents worked is suggested by the following paragraphs at the start of a longer Ancestor Tracts article titled Original Warrant Registers of PA / All Counties (viewed 24 March 2020) -- concerning Pennsylvania but apparently similar in other states ([sic] comments mine.

The process for obtaining land in Pennsylvania involved a 3-part process: (1) the prospective landowner had to file an application for land in fairly specific terms. When the Land Office received the application, they issued a warrant, or an order to have the desired tract surveyed. The applicant had to pay a fee for this warrant and became known as the warrantee. The loose warrant was copied into a ledger called a Warrant Register. (2) The next step was to pay a fee for the survey and wait until a deputy surveyor could be assigned to do the work. The results of the survey were returned to the Land Office with a precise description and map of the tract, nearly always including the names of the neighbors who owned the adjacent tracts. These loose surveys are on file at the Pennsylvania Archives in Harrisburg and have been copied into Survey Books. (3) The last step was to pay yet another fee to the colony or state and receive the final title which was called a patent. This is the official deed transferring ownership from the colony or state to the individual. He or she now became the patentee. Again, the patents were copied into ledgers called Patent Registers. Sometimes, many years passed between the 3 steps.

In our experience, perhaps 60-70% of the warrantees of a county were also the patentees. Often, however, the original warrantee died and the land passed to a relative or was bartered (sometimes for a gun or a coat) or sold to someone else; or he stayed on the land for a short while before moving on (usually west) and transferred the land to someone else who then patented it and became the patentee; or he was a speculator who never intended to settle on it and transferred ownership to someone else to [sic = who] then patented it.

Top  

Baldwin-Seale graves

William Bascom Wetherall's maternal-paternal-paternal great-great grandparents

John M. Baldwin Elizabeth Seale, parents of John R. Baldwin

John M. and Elizabeth Baldwin

Forthcoming.

Top  

Milton Baldwin's fence neighbor Archibald Grubb

Milton Baldwin's fence neighbor Archibald Grubb

Baldwin-Grubb family intermarriages and other ties

In the course of sorting out the families of my maternal and paternal grandparents (3rd generation) and great-grandparents (4th generation), a total of 6 unions involving 12 families, most of them large and rural, I learned the importance of looking closely at relationships between fence neighbors but also between siblings. A man or woman may marry a fence neighbor, a widowed man or woman may remarry a sibling of the deceased spouse, and older siblings and collateral relatives may take in younger children orphaned by the death of one or both parents. While such things still happen today, the odds of them happening are now much smaller, as families are smaller and more mobile, and mortality rates are much lower.

More recently, I began attempting to unravel the connections in the families of my great-great-grandparents (5th generation) and even great-great-great-grandparents (6th generation) on my paternal grandmother's Baldwin side -- again involving 6 unions of 12 families, centering on the Baldwin-Howard (5th) and Baldwin-Seale (6th) generations. This time I was more alert for marriages between neighbors, remarriages between in-law siblings, and sibling adoption following the break-up a families by the death of its parents. What I didn't expect was the sheer complexity of the relationships of the families over the half century or so centering on the War of the Rebellion, better known today as the Civil War of 1861-1865.

The more information I gathered -- in particular a 1903-1905 equity bill raised in the chancery court of Lee County Virginia, claiming 1/6th interest in Milton Baldwin's farm, in accordance with his will, signed in 1855 shortly before his death in the witness of a neighbor, Robert M. Bales. Jumping down this rabbit hole led to cases raised in 1885-1888 against Robert M. Bales as the administrator of the property left by Archibald Grubb, who died intestate in 1852. Jumping down this new rabbit hole led to a tangle of tunnels that connected with the first rabbit hole and others.

Top  


Grubb-Wyrick and Grubb-Markham families

Archibald and Elizabeth Grubb

Archibald and Nancy Ann Grubb

Archibald Grubb's families with Elizabeth Wyrick and Nancy Ann Markham
Table Name Birth Death Age Born Died Buried Vocation
0 Archibald Grubb c1811 abt Oct 1852 40-41 Wythe Co VA Lee Co VA Lee Co VA Farmer
0 Elizabeth Wyrick 17 Aug 1809 1844 34-35 Wythe Co VA Lee Co VA Lee Co VA House keeper
1 Mary Ann (Oaks) 14 Jan 1831 11 Aug 1861 30 Wythe Co VA Lee Co VA Lee Co VA House keeper
2 Lorenzo D. c1833 1 Jul 1893 59-60 Lee Co VA Lawrence Co IN Fish Cem Lawrence Co IN Farmer
3 Harriet (Baldwin) (Moles) 8 Apr 1836 17 Jul 1907 71 Wythe Co VA Muncie Delaware Co IN Monticello White Co IN House keeper
4 Elizabeth (Bartley) c1837 1884 46-47 Lee Co VA Tennessee Tennessee House keeper
5 John c1841 aft 1912 ≥ 71 Lee Co VA Lee Co VA Lee Co VA Farmer
6 Catharine c1840 aft 1853 ≥ 12 Apparently alive in 1852-1853 but no trace in later records
0 Nancy Ann Markham (Moles) c1828 aft 1880 ≥ 51 Lee Co VA Lee Co VA Lee Co VA House keeper
1 7 Martha J. c1847 c1889 41-42 Lee Co VA House keeper
2 8 William c1849 Lee Co VA House keeper
3 9 Archibald 28 Jan 1853 23 Aug 1924 71 Lee Co VA Grant Co KY Clarks Creek Cem Grant Co KY Farmer
  1. Archibald Grubb seems to have been born around 1811. He married Elizabeth Wyrick in Lee County on 11 April 1830. The death certificate of his son "Arch Grubbs" (1853-1924), born a few months after his father died (nlt early October 1852), gives his name as "John Grubbs" and his mother's name as "Anna Markem". The death certificate of Arch Grubb's half-sister Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles (1836-1907) gives her father's name as "John Grubb". So perhaps Achibald Grubb was known as "John" -- his father's name, as well as the name of his 2nd son John Grubb (c1841-c1917).
  2. Elizabeth Wyrick appears to have been born in 1809 in Wythe County, Virginia, the 1st child of Martin Wyrick (Junior) (1787-1866) and Barbara (Myers) Wyrick (1786-1858). Martin Wyrick was born in Wythe County on 14 November 1787 and he died on 30 June 1866 in Hagan in Lee County. Barbara was born on 17 October 1786 in Washington County in Virginia and died on 24 February 1858 in Hagan. Both are buried in Wyrick Cemetery in Hagan, which is between Jonesville and Rose Hill. Martin Wyrick was the son of Martin Wyrick (Senior) (1758-1830) and Anna Marie Elizabeth Hounshell (1762–1832), both of Wythe County, Virginia. The junior Martin Wyrick and Barbara Myers married around 1807 in Wythe County and moved to Lee County during the 1820s.
  3. Mary Ann Grubb was 19 on the 1850 census. She married David Oaks shortly after this, and is 28 on the 1860 census with an 8-year-old daughter and 2-year-old son. She died 11 August 1861. She is usually "Mary" or "Mary A." but some family trees show her as "Mary Margaret Ann".
  4. Lorenzo D. Grubb is 17 on the 1850 census but 40 on the 1880 census. He married Sarah Jane Baldwin, a neighbor, around 1851. Their first 2 children were born in Virginia, the next 2 in Kentucky, and 2 more in Indiana. She died in 1888 and he died in 1893. Both are buried in Fish Cemetery in Lawrence County in Indiana.
    1. Lorenzo and Sarah Grubb named one of their sons "John Milton Grubb" after Sarah's father, John Milton Baldwin (1792-1855). John Milton Grubb was born in Indiana on 12 February 1860 and married Mary I. Stultz on 24 January 1888 in Indiana. They settled in Texas, and he died on 29 March 1923 in Brownwood in San Antonio in Bexar County. He is buried in Mission Burial Park South in San Antonio. John M. Grubb's death certificate gives his father's name as "L.D. Grubb" and his mother's maiden name as "Sarah Mink" [sic = Sarah Baldwin]. The informant was "Mrs. Mary Grubb". Mary appears to have known her husband's maternal aunt Harriet (Baldwin) Mink and assumed that her mother-in-law, who died the year she and John Milton Grubb were married, had been a Mink. Of greater interest here, however, are the spellings -- "Grubb" and "Mink" -- not "Grubbs" or "Minks".
  5. Harriet Grubb died as Harriet Moles died on 16 July 1907 according to her obituary (see below).
    Harriet first married John M. Baldwin's 2nd son, William Baldwin, around 1851-1852, and she bore him a son, William L. Baldwin, around 1852-1853.
    1. John M. Baldwin, in his will, refers to William L. Baldwin as "little William". "Big William" -- as I will call his father -- died around this time, leaving Harriet a widow with Litte William. John M. Baldwin designated Little William as an heir in lieu of Big William, in a last will and testament he signed in the spring of 1855, then died in the fall of 1855.

    Harriet remarried Elihu H. Moles on 26 May 1856 and bore him at least 3 children, 1 son and 2 daughters.
    1. William L. "Little William" Baldwin's daughter, Lulu May (Baldwin) Postelwait -- in an equity bill she raised in Lee County's chancery court in 1903-1905 -- claimed that her father, an infant when Milton Baldwin's farm was sold in 1858, had never sold his 1/6th interest in the farm, and that she as his lawful heir had a right to 1/6th of the farm. The court favored her claim, and ordered that "1/6th undivided interest" in the farm be sold in a public auction -- and the owner of the farm, the sole bidder, paid the bond price of $300, exactly 1/6th of $1,500 she and her husband had paid for the farm. See Milton Baldwin's last will and testament for details.
  6. Elizabeth Grubb was 13 years old on the 1850 census. 3 years later, around 1853, she married Nicholas Speak Bartley (1831-1909), who was also from Rose Hill in Lee County. The 1860 census shows "Nicholas Bartley" (28) and "Elizabeth" (22) living in the Tazewell Post Office area of the 5th Subdivision of Claiborne County in Tennessee with 3 children ages 2-6. By the 1880 census they are living in the 14th Civil Distriction of Hancock County in Tennessee with 5 more children. Elizabeth died about 1884, and around 1886 Nicholas remarried Nancy E. Carmony (1848-1928), who bore him a son in 1887. Nicholas and Nancy are buried in Powhattan Cemetery in Powhattan, Brown County, Kansas. Presumably Elizabeth is buried in Hancock County in Tennessee.
  7. John Grubb appears to have been born in Feb 1841, based on a marriage dated 22 September 1867 which states this year of birth and says he was then 26, and conjectured from a 1 August 1912 confederate disability pension application which states he was then 71. He was 12 years old on the 1850 census (born around 1838), 27 on the 1870 census (born around 1943), 35 on the 1880 census (born around 1845), 57 on the 1900 census (born Feb 1843 according to the census), and 69 on the 1910 census (born around 1841. "John" was the name of his paternal grandfather, John Grubb (1775–1840), and it may have been his father's familiar name.
    1. I cannot trace a "John Grubb" born in Lee County around 1838 as implied by the 1850 census. His birth and death dates are also elusive. A Grubb family tree shows him as "John E. Grubb" born 15 April 1840 in Lee County and died 18 November 1917 in White Shoals, Lee County. It gives an "alternative" birth date of 4 May 1838. However, no documents accompany these claims, and census and other records suggest a different scenario.
      1. 1867 marriage   A Lee County marriage record (a transcription, not an image) shows that a "John Grubb" born in Lee County in 1841 -- father "Archelaus Grubb", mother "Betsy Grubb" -- married "Melvina Denton" on 22 September 1867. She was born in Washington County and was 16, and he was 26, which means he was born before before 23 September 1841. "Melvina Denton" is "Margrain Denton" (and John is "John Grubb") on the Indiana death certificate of Catharine Crouse (1879-1968), a daughter. But she is "Margaret" on censuses with "John Grubb" and "John Grubbs". Margaret Melvina Denton, born in Tennessee on 11 April 1841, died on 19 June 1890 in Lee County, Virginia, and is buried in Grubb Family Cemetery.
      2. 1894 marriage   A later Lee County marriage record (again, a transcription, not an image) shows that on 24 October 1894, "John Grubb", age 45, born in Lee County in 1849, father "A. Grubb", mother "E. Grubb", married Nancy Thompson, age 44, born in Lee County in 1850, father "A. Edmonson", mother "P. Edmonson." Nancy is also "Nancy C. Edmonson" or "Catherine". She is "Mrs. Nancy Katherin [sic] Grubb" on her Virginia death certificate, which says she died on 5 March 1923 in Rocky Station, Lee County, a widow, born in Washington County on 21 April 1855. "N.C. Edmonson" had previously married "J.H. Thompson" in Lee County on 30 January 1871.
    2. I cannot find a Grubb family in which the parents are "Archelaus" and "Betsy". I believe these names refer to "Archibald" and "Elizabeth" Grubb. "Betsy" is one of several informal forms of "Elizabeth". "Archelaus" could be a transcriber's error for "Archibald".
    3. Census data show a variety of ages for John Grubb, the son of Archibald and Elizabeth Grubb.
      1. No 1860 census listing found, but records of military service from 1861-1863 survive (see below).
      2. The 1870 census for the Jonesville Post Office area of White Shoals Township in Lee County shows "John Grubb" (27) with "Margaret" (23) and 2 children, "Wesley" (11/12) and "Jane" (1 12/12) ["12/12" overstruck and replaced by "1"]. John "Works on farm" and Margaret is "Keeping house". He cannot read and she can neither read nor write. He was born in Lee County, she in Washington County, Virginia.
      3. The 1880 census for the 4th Enumeration District of Lee County shows "John Grubbs" (35) with "Margaret" (28) and 5 children -- "Jno. W." (11), "Jane" (10), "Archales" (5), "Sarah E." (3), and "Catharine" (1). John is a farmer, Margaret is keeping house, and Jno. is at home. Everyone was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents.
      4. The 1900 census for White Shoals District of Lee County enumerates the household of "John Grubb" (57), born Feb 1843, with his wife "Catherine" (50), Apr 1850, and 3 children -- daughter "Martha Grubb" (15), Feb 1885, son "William Gubb" (14), Mar 1886, and step-daughter "Callie Thompson" (9), Aug 1890. John and Catherine have been married 5 years, and 6 of her 7 children survive. John is a farmer on a farm he owns free of mortgage. All were born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents, and all can read and write English.
      5. The 1910 census for White Shoals District in Lee County shows "John Grubb" (69) as head of household with his wife "N. C." (59) and their (his) daughter "Martha" (26). John and N.C. have been married 15 years in what is a 2nd marriage for both, and 6 of her 7 children are still living. He is a farmer engaged in general farming on his own account. John and N.C. can read but not write. Martha can both read and write. John is "C.A." (Confederate Army) in the column headed "Whether a survivor of the Union or Confederate Army or Navy".
      6. No 1920 census listing found and he is presumed to have died during the 1910s. He was alive as late as 1912, when he applied for a pension related to his military service the Army of the Confederate States of America.
    4. Military records show that "John Grubb" of Lee County, Virginia, enlisted in Lee County on 17 September 1861 as a Private in Company C, Virginia 21st Infantry Battalion (Source: The Virginia Regimental Histories Series).
    5. A "Pension Application for Disabled Confederate Soldier", signed on 1 August 1912 by "John Grubb" in the presence of the Justice of the Peace of Lee County, states that he was then "Seventy one" years old, was born in Lee County, and had resided in Virginia for "Seventy one years" and in the city or county of his present address for "71" years. The post office address on his application was "Hagan Va. R.F.D. No. 2". He listed "Nicolas Speak" (b1836) and "Peter Houndshell" (1838-1923) as "two comrades who served in the same command", and they signed the "Affidavit of Comrades" that accompanied the application. Nicolas Speak was a relative of John Grubb's brother in law Nicolas Speak Bartely, the husband of his sister Elizabeth. Peter Houndshell also signed the application as the witness of John Grubb's signature. William Speak, a brother of Nicolas Speak and a neighbor of Peter Houndshell, signed the "Oath of Resident Witnesses". Both the Speak and Houndshell families are enumerated in over half a century of censuses for western Lee County in the vicinities of Jonesville, Rose Hill, Hagan, and White Shoals.
      1. "R.F.D." (RFD) meant "Rural Free Delivery" in reference to a postal service that began in the United States in 1896. It later became "Rural Route" (RR) or just "Route". The service provided "free" delivery from the nearest post office to a farm or other rural residence. Before this, rural families had to pick up their mail from the nearest post office or pay a private company to deliver their mail from the post office to their home.
    6. John Grubb states in the application that his unit was disbanded in June 1863, and that while there were other companies to join, he was not in the service any more. In a letter dated 28 September 1912, the Adjutant General's Office of the War Department returned to the "Auditor of Public Accounts, State of Virginia, Richmond" a response to his application, confirming that its records showed that John Grubb had enlisted on 17 September 1861 and was present at a muster roll of his company for March and April 1862. This was the only roll on file. No later records were found. He listed liver, kidney, and rheumatism among the ailments that kept him from working to full capacity. His estate at the time was worth $273 real and $181 person, and his annual income from farming was $20.00.
  8. Catharine Grubb is 10 years old on the 1850 census. She appears to be counted among the 9 children "orphaned" by the death of her father in 1852, according to litigation filed in 1887 by Archibald Grubb Jr. against his earstwhile guardian Robert M. Bales (see Grubb brothers vs. Robert M. Bales below). However, I can find no trace of her in later records
  9. Nancy Ann Grubb, also known as "Annie" and "Anna", became Archibald Grubb's 2nd wife.
    1. Nancy was the daughter of Josiah Markham [sometimes "Marcum"] (1790–1842) and Mary Polly Bales [sometimes "Beals" or "Boles"] (1795–1877), a younger sister of Jane (Bales) Seale (1787-1841), the wife of Fielding Seale (1790-1838) and the mother of John M. Baldwin's wife Elizabeth. Mary was also an older sister of Robert M. Bales (1807-1893), who figured in the administration of the estates of both Archibald Grubb and John M. Baldwin.
    2. Nancy Ann Grubb relinquished the administration of Archibald Grubb's estate to Robert M. Bales on 18 October 1852, which puts a "no later than" limit on his Archibald Grubb's death. On 21 March 1853, the Lee County court assigned the guardianship of Nancy Ann's children -- Martha J., William, and Archibald (Junior) -- to Robert M. Bales. See Grubb brothers vs. Robert M. Bales for legal actions taken against Bales in the late 1880s by William and Archibald (Junior) concerning his handling of their father's property and their share of the inheritance.
    3. Nancy Ann Grubbs remarried William Hamilton Moles (1834-1864) on 26 June 1856. He died at a Union prisoner of war camp on 5 February 1864.
    4. Nancy appears in the following records.
      1. The 1850 census for Snow Creek District of Stokes County in North Carolina shows "William Moles" (17), the 2nd of 11 children and 2nd of 8 sons of "Wm. [William] J. Moles" (38) and "Elizabeth [(Lewis)] Moles" (37). Elihu H. Moles is enumerated as "Harden Moles" (12), the 4th child and 4th son. Everyone in the family was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents. William H. Moles, possibly alone, returned to Lee County, Virginia, where he married the widowed Nancy Ann (Markham) Grubb on 26 June 1856.
      2. 1851-1852   Harriet Grubb, Nancy Ann Grubb's step daughter, marries William Baldwin, a neighbor.
      3. October 1852   Archibald Grubb dies.
      4. 1852-1853   Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin bears William Baldwin's son, William L. Baldwin, called "little William" in his grandfather Milton M. Baldwin's 2 March 1855 last will and testament.
      5. 26 May 1856   Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin remarries Elihu Harden Moles (c1838-1890). She brings William L. Baldwin to the marriage, and would have at least 3 more children with Elihu. Little William grew up a Moles and then a Baldwin. He married as a Baldwin, and in 1903-1905 his daughter, Lulu May (Baldwin) Posterwait, with the help of her grandmother Harriet Moles, won an equity case in Lee County Chancery Court, in which she claimed to be the legal heir of 1/6th of her great-grandfather John M. Baldwin's Rose Hill, Lee County farm. See John M. Baldwin's last will and testament (above) for details.
      6. 26 June 1856   Nancy Ann (Markham) Grubbs, Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles's step-mother, remarries William Hamilton Moles (1834-1864), Elihu H. Moles younger brother. A step-mother and step-daughter thus become sisters-in-law.
        1. The Moles brothers were sons of William S. and Elizabeth Moles. The Moles family is enumerated in Stokes County, Virginia, in 1850 with 11 children, and in Pulaski County, Kentucky, in 1860 with 9 children -- 2 new children, minus William and Elihu, and Elbert Leander Moles. William and Elihu had married widowed Grubb and Baldwin wives. Elbert, born on 17 November 1839 in Palmer County, Virginia, had died on 19 August 1855 in Martins Creek, Lee County, Virginia. His parents were "Wm. S. Moles" and "Elizabeth Moles".
        2. During his sojourn in Lee County, William S. Moles bought some items from the personal estate of Archibald Grubb in 1852, and sold his Martins Creek property to Jacob Wolfenbarger in 1857. These may mark the dates his family arrived in and left Lee County. Jacob's daughter, Nancy C. Wolfenbarger, married Archibald Grubb's grandson, Archibald Grubb (Junior), who Nancy Ann (Markham) Grubb bore in January 1853, about 3 months after Archibald Grubb's death around October 1852.
        3. During the 1850s, between the 1850 and 1860 censuses, the Moles family was sojourning in the western part of Lee County. One family tree cites a Lee County record which shows that, on 23 October 1857, "William S. Moles and Elizabeth, his wife, Sold for the sum of $1050 to Jacob Wolfenbarger, Sr. 'A certain tract of land lying in Lee County on the waters of Martin's Creek'" (Ancestry.com).
        4. Contact between the Moles, Grubb, and Baldwin families is suggested in records which show that on 9 November 1852, "William S. Moles" purchased a couple of items from the personal estate of Archibald Grubb -- as did both John M. and John R. Baldwin and other Grubb and Baldwin neighbors. See Grubb brothers vs. Robert M. Bales (below) for details.
      7. The 1860 census for the Mt. Veron Post Office area of Rockcastle County in Kentucky shows the houseold of "Wm H. Moles" (26) with "Ann Moles" (31) and 4 children -- "Martha Grubb" (13), "Wm. Grubb" (11), "Arch Grubb" (7), and "Sarah A. Moles" (1). All were born in Virginia except Sarah, who was born in Kentucky. Nancy Ann brought the 3 Grubb children to the marriage. Legal actions taken in the late 1880s by Archibald and William Grubb suggest that Robert M. Bales continued to be their legal guardian.
      8. 18 April 1863   William H. Moles enlists in Lee County, Virginia, in Company I or the 27th Virginia Cavalry Battalion.
      9. 20 May 1863   William H. Moles joined station, apparently in the vicinity of Lee County, Virinia.
      10. 9 October or 9 December 1863   William H. Moles is captured at Jonesville in Lee County, Virginia, according to one manuscript record (date not dittoed). Another manuscript record says 9 December 1863 (date dittoed). October and December are a toss up. Union forces gained control of Cumberland Gap in September and mounted raids in Lee County, including Jonesville, its seat, in October and November 1863, and there were battles in Jonesville in January 1864. William H. Moles was sent to a Union prisoner-of-war camp in Louisville, Kentucky. The distance from Jonesville, Virginia to Louisville, Kentucky, through Cumberland Gap, today, is roughly 240 miles (385 kilometers). By automobile it would take about 4 hours non-stop. On foot it would take 8-12 days (20-30 miles/day) more or less. 100 days elasped between his capture at Jonesville and his 17 January 1864 "discharge" at Lousiville, Kentucky if captured on 9 October 1863 -- 39 days if captured on 9 December.
      11. 17 January 1864   William H. Moles is "discharged" from the prisoner-of-war camp in Louisville, Kentucky, and "sent to" a camp in Rock Island, Illinois. The distance from Louisville, Kentucky, to Rock Island, Illinois, today, is roughly 420 miles (670 kilometers). By automobile it would take about 6-1/2 hours non-stop. On foot it would take 14-21 days (20-30 miles/day) more or less. 19 days elasped between his "discharge" at Lousiville Kentucky and his 5 February 1864 death at Rock Island, Illinois. William H. Moles probably took sick enroute.
      12. 5 February 1864   William H. Moles, bunked in Barrack 58 (one record suggests 59) in the prisoner-of-war facility at Rock Island, Illinois, dies of "Variola" (smallpox). He is buried in grave 378 in Section A "south of prison barracks". The vertical gravestone appears to bear only the grave number, and his name and military unit.
      13. 28 August 1864   John Hamilton Moles was born in Lee County on or about this date, around 7-1/2 months after his father's death. Assuming he is William's son, if his mother carried him for 9 months, then he would have been conceived around November 1863. If, as it appears, William was stationed in Lee County, he would have been able to visit his wife. Conception between late October and early December supports a 9 December rather than 9 October date of captivity. He might even have been captured while visiting his wife.
      14. The 1870 census for Rose Hill Township in Lee County Kentucky shows the household of "Nancy A. Moles" (43) with a personal estate worth $200 and 4 children -- 2 Moles children, "Sarah A. Moles" (12) and "John W. Moles" (6) -- and 2 Grubb children, "William Grubb" (21) and "Archibald Grubb" (17). Nancy is keeping house, her 2 children are at home, and the Grubb boys are working the farm. All were born in Lee County, Virginia, except Sarah, who was born in Rockcastle County, Kentucky. Among those the older household members, all can read, but Nancy and Sarah Moles, and Archibald Grubb, cannot write.
      15. The 1880 census for Rose Hill Township in Lee County shows "Anna Moles" (50), keeping house, with her son "John Moles" (15), the last of at least 4 children she had with William H. Moles before his death on 5 February 1864.
        1. I find no unambiguous records of Nancy Ann (Markham) (Grubb) Moles's existence after this -- hence the provision "aft 1880". Records regarding John H. Moles (1864-1923) show the usual problems with spellings of names and birth and death dates, but clearly establish his descent from William H. and Nancy Ann Moles.
        2. "John H. Moles", age 22, born in 1865 in Lee County, Virginia, father "W.H. Moles", mother "N. Moles", married "Rachael Gollahan", age 23, born in 1864 in Lee County, Virginia, father "Jas Gollahan", in Lee County, Virginia, on 20 January 1887, according to a transcription (not a scan) of a Virginia marriage record.
      16. The 1900 census for the Bales Forge Voting Precinct of Rose Hill in Lee County shows "John H. Moles" (35), born Aug 1864, with his wife "Rachel" [nee "Rachael A. Gallohan] (35), born Sept 1864, and 2 children. They have been married for 13 years and 2 of her 4 children are still living. All were born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents. He is a farmer on a rented farm. Rachel cannot read or write. The surviving children were their 1st and 2nd born, James Henry Moles (1888-1956) and Florence Mae "Flossie" Moles (1890–1970).
      17. The 1910 census for the Bales Forge Precinct in the Rose Hill District of Lee County shows "John H. Moles" (46) and "Rachel A." (46) with 1 son, "Henry J." (21). They have been married 22 years and 2 of her 4 children are still living. John is a farmer on a general farm he owns free of mortgage. Henry is a farm laborer, presumably working for his father.
      18. The 1920 census for Rose Hill Magisterial District of Lee County shows "John H. Moles" (54) with his wife "Rachel A." (54) farming on a general farm he owns free of mortgage and operates on his own account.
      19. John Hamilton Moles is "John Ham Moles" on his Rose Hill Magisterial District death certificate, which says he was born in Virginia on "August 28th 1864" and died on "April 13th 1923". His father was Virginia-born "William Moles" and his mother was Virginia-born "Annie Marcum". The certificate was filed on 13 April 1923, and burial was slated for 14 April 1923 in "Sloane Graveyard" in Rose Hill. However, his tombstone in "Trent Cemetery" in Rose Hill reads "JOHN H. MOLES / "born / Aug. 15, 1865 / died / Apr. 22, 1923 / Gone but not forgotten". His wife is buried in the same cemetery as "RACHEL MOLES / Sept 16, 1864 / Nov. 15, 1940 / GONE HOME".
        1. If John H. Moles was his father's son, and if his father died on 5 February 1864 as several contemporary records show, then John H. Moles was born in or about August 1864 as the 1900 census and his 1923 death certificate state. However, Union military records show that William H. Moles was in captivity in Louisville, Kentucky, and then at Rock Island, Illinois at the time it would seem that John H. Moles was concevied. See Private William H. Moles (below) for details.
      20. John H. Moles is also "John Ham Moles" and Rachael is "Rachel Golhorn" on the Rose Hill, Lee County death certificate of their son "James Henry Moles" (1888-1956). The cause of death was certified by "Thomas S. Ely, M.D., Coroner" of Jonesville. James Henry Moles (1888-1956) and his wife, Laura Bradford (Brock) Moles (1901-1972), are buried at Bradford-Daniel Family Cemetery in Rose Hill.
  10. Martha J. Grubb was the first of three children of Archibald Grubb's 2nd wife Nancy Ann Markham.
  11. William Grubb -- No further information at this time.
  12. Archibald Grubb (Junior) was born in Rose Hill in January 1853. He married Nancy E. Wolfenbarger in Lee County on 19 October 1871.
    1. Nancy Ann (Markham), Archibald Grubb's 2nd wife, was pregnant at the time he died around October 1852, and she named his last son -- born in January 1853 -- "Archibald". In litigation 30 years later (1887-1888) against his earstwhile guardian Robert M. Bales, concerning his inheritance, the younger Archibald Grubb would call himself "Archibald Grubb Jr." and his father "Archibald Grubb Sr." See Grubb brothers vs. Robert M. Bales below). On all but one census, the younger Archibald Grubb is "Arch". On the 1870 census, though, he is "Archibald". A transcriber, however, wrote "Turbb Archille" for manuscript that I would read "Grubb Archibald".

Archibald Grubb

Archibald Grubb (c1811-1852) was born about 1811 in Wythe County, Virginia, to John Grubb (1871-1840) and Catherine Walters (1775–1825). John Grubb was born about 1771 in Oxford in Adams County, Pennsylvania, and died on 25 January 1840 in Wythville in Wythe County, Virginia. Catherine Walters was about about 1775 in Wytheville and died about 1825 in Wythe County. They appear to have married around 1796 judging from the birth of their 1st child and son in 1797. Archibald appears to have been the 7th of 8 children and the 4th of 5 sons.

Archibald Grubb (c1811-1852) married Elizabeth Wyrick (1809-1844) in Wythe County, Virginia, on 11 April 1830. By the 1840 census, they had moved to Lee County, Virginia.

  1. The 1840 census for "Free White Person" and "Free Colored Persons" and "Slaves" residing in Lee County, Virginia, enumerates the households of "Fielding Seal" (5 persons), "Joel Wirick" [sic = Wyrick] (6 persons), "Gabriel Markham" (6 persons), "Archibald Grubb" (7 persons), "Jane Seal" (2 persons), and "John M. Baldwin" (8 persons) -- and 25 other households -- on the same sheet.
    1. Fielding Seal is John M. Baldwin's father-in-law.
    2. Joel Wyrick (1816-1860) is Archibald Grubb's brother in law.
    3. Archibald Grubb and John M. Baldwin would become parents-in-law in marriages between the families.

The Archibald Grubb household on the 1840 census includes the following members by age group. The names and ages are my conjectures based mainly on the 1850 census.

      Male  Female  Totals  Conjectured names and ages   
  0-4    1      2      3    John (2), Elizabeth (3), Harriet (4-5)
  5-9    1      1      2    Lorenzo (7), Mary A. (9)
30-39    1      1      2    Archibald (29-30), Elizabeth (31)
------------------------
Totals   3      4      7
No persons engaged in agriculture.
1 person over 20 could not read or write.
  1. 1844   Elizabeth Grubb dies, leaving Archibald widowed with 6 children, 2 born since the 1840 census.
  2. 1846   Archibald Grubb marries Nancy Ann Markham. He is 35, and she is 18 -- 12 years older than the youngest of her 6 step-children, only 3 years older than the oldest.
  3. The 1850 census for for District 31, Lee County, Virginia, shows "Archibald Grubb" (39) with his 2nd wife "Ann" (22) and 8 children -- 6 by his 1st wife Elizabeth, "Mary A." (19), "Lorenzo" (17), "Hariet" [sic = Harriet] (15), "Elizabeth" (13), "John" (12), and "Catharine" (10) -- and 2 by Ann, "Martha J." (3) and "William" (1). Archibald Grubb is farming and his owned real estate is valued at $800. Lorenzo is also farming, presumably with his father. Ann -- who Archibald married in 1846, after the death of his 1st wife Elizabeth in 1844 -- is marked as a person over 20 who is unable to read or write (as was Elizabeth).
  4. October 1852   Archibald Grubb dies, leaving Nancy Ann (Markham) Grubb with 8 children, 2 of whom are hers -- pregnant with a 9th Grubb child, her 3rd.
  5. 28 January 1853   Nancy Ann gave birth to a son who was named Archibald Grubb, after his father, hence "Archibald Grubb Jr." in some references.

The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County, virginia, shows "Archibald Grubb" (39) with 9 children -- "Ann" (22), "Mary A." (19), "Lorenzo" (17), "Hariet" (15), "Elizabeth" (13), "John" (12), "Catharine" (10), "Martha J." 3, and "William" (1). Archibald and Lorenzo were farming on land valued at $800.

  1. William Baldwin, born about 1834, died about 1852, is "William Baldwin deceased" on his father John M. Baldwin's last will and testament dated 2 March 1855. He appears to have married Harriet Grubb, a neighbor, around 1850 in Tazwell, Tennessee, just south of the Rose Hill area of Lee County, Virginia, where they lived on the "Milton Baldwin farm" with William Baldwin's parents. Harriet Moles testified in 1903 that she married William Baldwin about 52 or 53 years ago, and married Elihu Moles in 1856 after about 4 years as a widow (see John M. Baldwin's will below for details.
    1. 1829-1830   William Baldwin born according to 1850 census.
    2. 8 April 1836   Harriet Grubb born in With [sic = Wythe] County, Virginia, but raised in Lee County, Virginia, according to Harriet's deposition. Her father's Grubb farm, and her step-father Milton Baldwin's farm "joined" (were immediate neighbors).
    3. 1838   Elihu Harden Moles born in Virginia. The 1850 census shows "Harden" (12) living with his parents "Wm. S. Moles" (38) and "Elizabeth" (37) -- the 4th oldest of 11 children ranging in age from 18 to 1. Everyone in the family was born in Virginia.
    4. The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County, Virginia, shows "Archibald Grubb" (39) with his 2nd wife "Ann" (22) and 8 children -- 6 by his 1st wife, "Mary A." (19), "Lorenzo" (17), "Hariet" [sic = Harriet] (15), "Elizabeth" (13), "John" (12), and "Catharine" (10) -- and 2 by his 2nd wife, "Martha J." (3) and "William" (1). He is farming and his home is valued at $800. Lorenzo is also farming. Ann is a person over 20 who is unable to read or write.

Top  

Grubb children Grubb children

Archibald and Nancy Grubb's last child

Born "Archibald Grubb", dies "Arch Grubbs"

Headstones of Archibald "Arch" Grubbs (Junior) and Elizabeth "Betty" Nancy (Brown) Grubbs
Clarks Creek Cemetery, Dry Ridge, Grant County, Kentucky
Photographs by Kentucky Pumpkin copped from Find a Grave

James Markham Death certificate for James H. Markham (1836-1916) shows parents as "Josiah Markham" and "Mary Bales"
Informed by "Robbert Campbell" (signed), slated for burial in "Edds Cemetery" by undertaker "Robert Campbell"
"James H. Marcum" (1836-1916) buried in "Hobbs Cemetery" in Rose Hill
Copped from Ancestry.com

Grubb children

Grubb-Wyrick and Grubb Markham families

Archibald Grubb sired 2 families -- the 1st with Elizabeth Wyrick and the 2nd with Nancy Ann Markham. The 2 families co-resided from Archibald's remarriage to Nancy in 1846 until Archibald's death in the fall of 1852, after which Nancy would raise her 3 children -- including Archibald Jr., who she bore a few months after Archibald Sr.'s death -- with her 2nd husband, Elihu Moles, who she married in 1858. I cannot find Nancy Moles after the 1880 census. Elihu Moles seems to have died in 1890.

The general schedule for the 1850 census for Lee County shows the households of Archibald Grubb, John M. Baldwin, James A. Thomas, and Mary Markham on the same enumeration sheet. James A. Thomas's wife, Mary A., is John M. Baldwin's daughter. Archibald Grubb's wife, [Nancy] Ann, is Mary Markham's daughter. Within a few years, John M. Baldwin's son William and daughter Sarah would marry Archibald Grubb's daughter Harriet and son Lorenzo.


Markham-Bales

Josiah Markham and Mary Bales

Josiah "Joseph" Markham (1790-1842) was the son of John Nathan Markham (1764–1838) and Jenny Edds (1766-1838). The family names "Markham" and "Edds" appear with spellings like "Marcum" and "Eads" on contemporary documents and grave markers. I will generally show all names as I find them and comment on spellings when necessary.

Mary Markham (1795-1877) -- nee Mary Polly Bales, aka as Polly Beals -- was the wife of Josiah "Joseph" Markham (1790–1842). She was the daughter of Jonathan Bales (1761–1837) and Elizabeth Turner (1764–1830). "Bales" is also found as "Beals" and "Boles". And many family trees have "McGuire" or "McGuire Turner" or "Turner McGuire".

Of importance in the history of the Baldwin-Seale and Baldwin-Howard families is the fact that Mary Polly (Bales) Markham (1795-1877) was both an older sister of Robert M. Bales (1808–1893) and a younger sister of Jane (Bales) Seale (1787-1841). Robert M. Bales, a wealthy industrialist, merchant, and slave owner in Lee County, figured prominently in the affairs of both the Grubb and Baldwin families. Jane Bales married Fielding Seale (1790-1838), and as such she was the mother of John M. Baldwin's wife Elizabeth. Jane was the 2nd, Mary the 9th, and Robert the 10th of 11 children of Jonathan Bales (b1761) and Martha Elizabeth (1764), who married about 1784.

Josiah was born in Bedford, Virginia, in 1790, and he died on 7 October 1842 in Lee County, Virginia, leaving Mary with as many as 10 children. Mary was born on 13 October 1795 in Botetourt County, Virginia. She died on 17 March 1877 in Bales Mill in Lee County.

10 January 1815   A list of "Marriage Bonds in Bedford Co., Virginia" in a Quaker publication shows that "Josiah Markham" and "Polly Beales" married on 10 January 1815. An image of the original handwritten license permitting their marriage also shows these spellings.

The 1820 census for Lee County enumerates the "Josiah Markum" household with 5 free-white persons classifed by age and sex as follows. The conjectured names and ages are mine.

      Male  Female  Totals  Conjectured names and ages   
  0-9    2      1      3    William (0-1)
                            Alexander (2)
                            Rachael (4-5)
16-24           1      1    Mary (24-25)
26-44    1             1    Josiah (29-30)
--------------------------
Totals   3      2      5
1 person engaged in agriculture.

The 1820 census was taken about 5 years after Josiah and Mary married. The above compositon accounts for the 3 children they appear to have had by 1820.

I am unable to find the Markham-Bales family in the 1830 census for Lee County or elsewhere.

The 1840 census for Lee County enumerates the "Josiah Markham" household with 12 free-white persons classifed by age and sex as follows. The conjectured names and ages are mine.

      Male  Female  Totals  Conjectured names and ages   
  0-4    2             2    John (1-2)
                            James (3-4)
  5-9           2      2    Rachel (7-8)
                            Selina (9-10)
10-14    1      2      3    Harrison (13-14)
                            Nancy (11-12)
                            1 other daughter
15-19    2             2    Alfred (15-16)
                            George (17-18)
20-29    1             1    Alexander (21-22)
40-49    1      1      2    Josiah (49-50)
                            Mary (44-45)
--------------------------
Totals   7      5     12
4 person engaged in agriculture.

The 1840 census enumerates 10 children. Rachel Markham (1815-1832) appears to have passed away. William Markham (1817–1893) is enumerated as "William Markham" on the same sheet, as the head of a household composed of 1 male 0-4 [son Nathan], 1 male 20-21 [himself], and 1 female 20-29 [wife Rachael]. The 1840 census includes 1 daughter 10-14 whose name does not appear on the 1850 census, who I thus presume had passed away by then. Some family trees list 2 sons born after the 1840 census -- Robert and Joseph -- but Joseph does not appear on the 1850 census. Mary thus appears to have had as many as 14 children, of whom I am able to conjecture or identify 13 from 1820 to 1850 censuses.

The same sheet lists the households of "Vincent Bales" (13 persons) and "William Markham" (3 persons). And immediately below Josiah Markham are two Edds households. Josiah Markham had business dealings with Vincent Bales. William Markham was Josiah's 2nd son. The Edds households are probably relatives of Josiah Markham's mother, Jenny Edds (1766–1838). His father was John Nathan Markham (1764–1838).

1842   Josiah "Joseph" [Lawrence] Markham dies, leaving 8-10 minor children, 5 of whom she is still carrying for at the time of the 1850 census.

The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County shows Mary as "Mary Markham" (45) [sic = 55] and 5 children -- "Selina" (19), "Rachel" (18), "James" (14), "John" (12), and "Robert" (9). "Farming" was written but then crossed out as Mary's occupation. The 3 younger children attended school within the year.

The 1860 census for the Jonesville Post Office area of the Western District of Lee County shows "Mary Marcum" [sic = Markham] (61) living with her son "John Marcum" (22) and his wife "Margret [sic = Margaret] E. Marcum". Here, as in other 1860 Jonesville Post Office enumerations, "Margaret" is spelled "Margret". John and Margaret were born in Lee County, and Mary in Botetourt County, Virginia.

The 1870 census for the Jonesville Post Office area of Rose Hill Township in Lee County shows "Mary Markham" (73), no occupation, in the household of her son-in-law "Johnson D. Hobbs" (46), no occupation, with "Salina" (38), keeping house, and 5 children -- "William C." (13), "Robert H." (11), "James W." (7), "Sarah M." (5), and "Nannie N." [Harriet A.] (2) -- plus "Jefferson Cole" (22). William Hobbs and Jefferson Cole work on a farm, apparently the land owned by Johnson Hobbs, who has real and personal estates valued at $150 and $400. Salina and Robert are unable to read or write. William is able to read a little but cannot write. Johnson Hobbs, Jefferson Cole, and Mary Markham are able to read and write a litte. Everyone was born in Lee County except Mary, who was born in Botetourt County, Virginia.

17 March 1877   Mary Markham, born "Mary Polly Bales" on 13 October 1795 in Botetourt County, Virginia, died on 17 March 1877 in Bales Mill in Lee County. Her parents were Jonathan Bales (1761-1837) and Elizabeth Turner (1764–1820). Jonathan Bales was born on 22 March 1761 in Huntington, York County, Pennsylvania, and died on 20 April 1837 at Edds (Bales) Mill near Martins Creek in Lee County. He is buried in Jonathan Bales Cemetery in Edds Mill. Elizabeth (McGuire Turner) Bales, born in Greenbriar in Fairfax County in Virginia on 20 April 1764, died in Lee County in 1820. She, too, is buried in Jonathan Bales Cemetery. Their tombs, and the tomb of their daughter Hettie Easter (Bales) McMullin, are marked by stones, boxed, that have no inscriptions -- apparently characteristics of several tombs in this cemetery.

Markham-Bales family

2 Ancestry.com versions

Many Ancetsry.com member trees include one or another version of the Markham-Bales family of Josiah Markham and and Mary Polly Bales. Markham appear to have had the following children (unconfirmed). Lists of Markham-Bales children widely vary. The two following lists are among the most common. Very few children in the two lists entirely match in terms of their names and birth-death years.

Josiah Marcum (Markham)** (1790-1842)
Mary Polly Beals/Bales** (1795–1877)

Married 10 January 1815

Marshall A. Markham (1811–1900)
William J. Marcum** (1814–1903)
Rachel Marcum (1815–)
Alexander Leftridge Markham (1818–1891)
William A. Marcum (1819–1893)
Alfred M. Marcum (1820–1841)
George Elvis Markham (1822–1904)
Harrison Columbus Markham (1826–1917)
Nancy Ann Marcum (1828–1850)
Salina Markham (1830–1888)
Rachel Markham (1832–)
James Markham (1836–1916)
James Henry Marcum (1837–1880)
John Frank Marcum (1838–1921)
Robert Bales Marcum (1839–1903)
Joseph Harrison Markham (1840–1926)
Josiah Marcum (1790–1842)
Mary "Polly" Bales (1795–1877)

Married 10 January 1815



Rachel Marcum (1815–1832)
William A. Marcum (1817–1893)
Alexander Leftridge Marcum (1818–1891)
George Alvis Marcum (1822–1904)
Alfred W. Marcum (1824–1868)
Harrison Columbus Marcum (1826–1850)
Nancy Ann Marcum (1828–1850)
Selina E. Marcum (1830–1888)
James H. Markham (1836–1916)
John Frank Marcum (1838–1921)
Joseph Harrison Markham (1840–1926)
Robert B. Marcum (1841–1910)

Markham-Bales family

My working version

I compiled the following list of the most plausible members of the Markham-Bales nuclear family of Josiah Markham and Mary Bales, using information from documents and what I judged to be the best researched family trees. Alternative information is shown in [brackets].

 0. Josiah [Laurence] Markham    1790         1842
 0. Mary "Polly" Bales           1795         1877
 1. Rachel                       1815         1832
      Conjectured on 1820 census
 2. William A.               Mar 1817     Feb 1903
      Born Rose Hill, Lee Co, VA
      Died Willard, Carter Co, KY
      Conjectured on 1820 census
 3. Alexander Leftridge   27 Dec 1818  25 Sep 1891
      Born and died in Lee Co, VA
      Conjectured on 1820 and 1840 censuses
 4. George Alvis          22 Nov 1820  25 May 1904
      Born Rose Hill, Lee Co, VA
      Died Hancock Co, TN
      Conjectured on 1840 census
 5. Alfred P. (Allen)        Feb 1825         1868
      Born Lee Co, VA
      Died Hancock Co, Tennessee
      Conjectured on 1840 census
 6. Harrison Columbus            1826         1917
      Born and died in Lee Co, VA
      Conjectured on 1840 census
 7. Nancy Ann                   c1828      aft1880 1st Archibald Grubb
      Born Rose Hill, Lee Co., VA                  2nd William H. Moles
      Conjectured on 1840 census
 8. Salina E.             30 Mar 1830  29 Jan 1888 Jonathan D. Hobbs
      Born Rose Hill, Lee Co, VA
      Died Lee Co, VA
      Conjectured on 1840 census
      Selina (19) on 1850 census with mother
      Salina (38) on 1870 census with mother
 9. Elizabeth Rachel            c1832 
      Born Lee Co, VA
      Conjectured on 1840 census
      18 on 1850 census with mother
10. Unnamed girl                c1834     bef 1850
      Conjectured on 1840 census, not on 1850 census
11. James Henry           19 Jan 1836   2 Mar 1916  Sarah Ball
      Born Rose Hill, Lee Co., VA [5 Nov 1837]
      Died Lee Co., VA
      Conjectured on 1840 census
      14 on 1850 census with mother
12. John Frank            21 Mar 1838  12 Jan 1921
      Born Rose Hill, Lee Co, VA
      Died Knoxville, Knox Co, Tennessee
      Conjectured on 1840 census
      12 and 22 on 1850 and 1860 censuses with mother
13. Robert Bales             Jul 1840         1903 Rachel Lavisa Robinson
      Born in Lee Co, VA
      9 on 1850 census with mother
14. Joseph Harrison       31 Aug 1840   8 Dec 1926
      Born and died in Rose Hill, Lee Co, VA
      Does not appear on 1850 census
      Unconfirmed

Top  


Bales-Turner

Jonathan Bales and Elizabeth Turner

The Baldwin-Seale and Baldwin-Howard families became entwined in complex ways with descendants of Jonathan Bales and Elizabeth Turner.

The following Bales-Turner children or their children become significantly involved in the Baldwin-Seale and Baldwin-Howard families.

  1. Jane Bales, later Jane Seale (1787-1841)
    Jane married Fielding Seale (1790-1838).
    The Seales were the parents of Elizabeth Seale (cira 1808-1858).
    Elizabeth married John M. Baldwin (circa 1802-1855).
    The Baldwins were the parents of John R. Baldwin, William Baldwin, and Thomas Newton Baldwin.
  2. Mary Polly Bales, later Mary Markham (1795-1877)
    Mary married Josiah Markham (1790-1842).
    The Markhams were the parents of Nancy Ann Markham (c1828-aft1880).
    Nancy became the 2nd wife of Archibald Grubb (circa 1811-1852).
    Archibald Grubb's daughter Harriet Grubb (1836-1907) married William Baldwin (circa 1830-1854).
    After Grubb's death, Nancy married William H. Moles (1834-1864).
    William Moles was the older brother of Elihu H. Moles (1838–1890).
    After William Baldwin's death, Elihu married Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin.
  3. Robert M. Bales (1807-1893), an industrialist who owned land and slaves
    Bales became the administor of Grubb's estate and the guardian of Grubb's youngest 3 children, 2 of them Nancy's.
    2 of the 3 children, one of them Nancy's, later sued Bales (see Grubb brothers vs. Robert M. Bales below).
    John M. Baldwin became directly involved in the sale of Grubb's property.
    Bales later witnessed John M. Baldwin's will.

The above families were related as follows.

  1. Elizabeth (Seale) Baldwin, and Nancy (Markham) (Grubb) Moles, as daughters of sisters, were 1st cousins.
    They were also nieces of Robert M. Bales.
  2. Robert M. Bales was an uncle of Elizabeth Seales and Nancy Markham.
    He was therefore a brother-in-law of both John M. Baldwin (Elizabeth's husband) and Archibald Grubb (Nancy's 1st husband), as well as of William Moles (Nancy's 2nd husband).
  3. Nancy (Markham) Grubb became Harriet Grubb's step-mother.
    As widows who married brothers, step-mother and step-daughter became sisters in law.
  4. Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin, as William Baldwin's wife, became John M. Baldwin's daughter-in-law and John R. Baldwin's sister-in-law.
    She was the mother of William's son "Little William", whose daughter, Lulu May (Baldwin) Postelwait (1885-1969), claimed his share to his grandfather John M. Baldwin's estate, pursuant to a will witnessed by Robert M. Bales.
    Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin, widowed, married Elihu Moles, and a month later her step-mother Nancy (Markham) Grubb, also widowed, married Elihu's older brother William Moles, and became her step-daughter's sister-in-law.

Robert M. Bales

R.M. Bales had his fingers in numerous Lee County pies as a general merchant and ironworks industrialist.

His iron interests included the Bowling Green Bloomary Forge, which one source describes as follows (Lesley 1859, page 186).

situated on Martin's creek 15 miles west of Jonesville four miles southeast of Rose Hill P.O.
owned by C. & R.M. Bales & Co. and managed by R.M. Bales, Rose Hill P.O., Lee County Virginia,
built in 1828 and rebuilt in 1857,
has now [1859] 1 fire and 1 hammer worked by water
and makes about 9 tons of bars annually


Source
J.P. Lesley
The Iron Manufacturer's Guild to the Furnaces,
Forges and Rolling Mills of the United States

(With Discussions of Iron as a Chemical Element,
an American Ore, and a Manufactured Article,
in Commerce and in History)
New York: John Wiley, Puplishers, 1859

Family name variations

The family names are represented with numerous spellings on public documents, due to variations in pronunciation and phonetic spelling.

Bales is found as "Boles" and "Beals" but "Bales" predominates.

Markham is found as "Marcum" and "Markem" but "Markham" predominates.

Seal is most commonly just "Seal" in earlier documents but is sometimes "Seals" and later more commonly "Seale".

Grubb also predominates, though some descendants seem to have gone by "Grubbs" -- probably for the same reason that "Meek" and "Seal" or "Seale" could become "Meeks" and "Seals" or "Seales".

Chronology

1814   A paper showing his discharge from service in an artillery battalion of the Virginia Militia on 9 April 1814 shows Josiah's Markham's name as "Josiah Markham".

Mary and Josiah Markham appear to have had at least 12 children born between 1815 and 1840. Mary Ann was their 7th child and 2nd of 3 daughters -- the other daughters being their 1st born "Rachel Bales" (b1815) and 8th born "Salina Markham" (1830-1880). Their 11th child and 8th of 9 sons was "Robert Bales Markham" (b1839), whose namesake was Mary's youngest brother and sibling "Robert McMillan Bales" (1808-1893).

10 January 1815   "Josiah Markham" married "Polly Beales" in Bedford in Bedford County, Virginia, according to a Quaker bulletin (Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Volume VI, page 956, "Marriage Bonds of Bedford Co., Virginia").

1850-1851   William Baldwin married Harriet Grubb in Tazwell, Tennessee, according to her deposition on behalf of her granddaughter. In the deposition, she remarked that "Taswell [sic], Tennessee, . . . is in the county immediately joining Lee County, Virginia." By roads today, Tazwell, the county seat of Claiborne County, Tennessee, is about 72 kilomters (45 miles), roughly 50 minutes, west and south of Jonesville, the county seat of Virginia County. It's about one-third closer from the Rose Hill area where the Baldwins and Grubbs lived practically cheek by jowl.

The agriculture schedule for the 1850 census shows the households of Archibald Grubb, John M. Baldwin, and Martin Wyrick on the same enumeration sheet.

1853   Elizabeth Grubb appears to have married Nicholas Bartley around 1853. The 1860 census for the Tazewell Post Office area of the 5th Subdivision of Claiborne County in Tennessee shows "Nicholas Bartley" (28), a farmer, real estate $1000, personal estate $331, with "Elizabeth" (22) and 2 children, "Sarah J." (6) and "James A." (4). All were born in Virginia. Elizabeth is marked as being a person over 20 who is unable to read or write. By the 1880 census for the 14th Civil District of Hancock County, Tennessee, Elizabeth has had at least 4 more children. Apparently Elizabeth died, or she and Nicholas were divorced, in the early 1880s, for by the 1900 census Nicholas (68) had been been married for 14 years to "Nancy" (51) (nee "Nancy E. Carmony"), who had bore him a son in 1888. "Nicholas Speak Bartley", born on 18 October 1831 in Rose Hill in Lee County, Virginia, died on 10 November 1909 in Powhattan in Brown County, Kansas. He is buried as "N.S. Bartley" with his wife "Nancy Bartley" (1848-1924) in Powhattan Cemetery in Powhattan.

26 May 1856   William Baldwin's widow Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin married Elihu H. Moles in Claiborne County in Tennessee, according a Tennessee marriage index.

In her 1903 deposition in the matter of her granddaughter Lulu May Postelwait's claim to her Baldwin father's inheritance, Harriet recalls that she and Elihu Moles were married in Tazwell, the county seat of Claiborne County. However, her recollection that she remarried after about 4 years of being a widow is not supported by the ages assigned her Baldwin son -- William L. Baldwin aka William Moles -- who appears to have been born only a year or two before she remarried.

16 June 1856   Nancy Ann (Markham) Grubb married William Hamilton Moles on 26 June 1856.

The 1860 census for the Stanford Post Office area of Lincoln County, Kentucky, shows "Elihu H. Moles" (23) with "Harriett" (24), and 2 children, "Wm L. Moles" (5) and "Edmond Delany" (12). Elihu is a carpenter. All were born in Virginia. Harriet is a person over 20 who is unable to read or write.

William's stated age in 1860 -- 5 years old -- is consistent with his the ages given in 1870 and 1880 -- 15 and 25 years old. All ages suggests that he was born in 1855. This implies that he was conceived in 1854, which means that his father, William Baldwin, John R. Baldwin's 1st younger brother, died no earlier than 1854.

The 1860 census for Mt. Venor Post Office area of Rockcastle County in Kentucky shows "Wm. H. Moles" (26) with "Ann" 31 and 4 children -- 3 Grubb children, "Martha Grubb" (13), "Wm. Grubb" (11), and "Arch Grubb" (7) -- and 1 Moles child, "Sarah A. Moles" (1). William Moles, a farmer, has real and personal estates worth $600 and $348. The three Grubb children attended school within the year. All were born in Virginia except Sarah, who was born in Kentucky.

The 1860 census for the Jonesville Post Office area of the Western District of Lee County shows "David Oaks" (31), a farm laborer born in Jenson County, Tennessee, married to "Mary A." (28), a housekeeper born in "Withe" [sic = Wythe] County, Virginia, and 2 Lee-County-born children, "Elisabeth A." (8) and "John" (3).

1861   Mary A. Grubbs (1831-1861), born in Wythe County, Virginia, in 1831, died on 11 August 1861 in Lee County as "Mary A. Oaks" the wife of David Oaks.

18 April 1863   William H. Moles enlisted on 18 April 1863 in Lee County, Virginia, as a private in Company I, Virginia 25th Cavalry Regiment, a Confederate unit, but was captured by Union forces at Jonesville on 5 October 1863 and died of smallpox in captivity in Rock Island, Illinois, on 5 February 1864.

The 1870 census for Rose Hill Township in Lee County Kentucky shows the household of "Nancy A. Moles" (43) with a personal estate worth $200 and 4 children -- 2 Moles children, "Sarah A. Moles" (12) and "John W. Moles" (6) -- and 2 Grubb children, "William Grubb" (21) and "Archibald Grubb" (17). Nancy is keeping house, her 2 children are at home, and the Grubb boys are working farm. All were born in Lee County, Virginia, except Sarah, who was born in Rockcastle County, Kentucky. Among those the older household members, all can read, but Nancy and Sarah Moles, and Archibald Grubb, cannot write.

The 1900 census for Downingville in Grant County, Kentucky, shows the household of "Arch Grubbs" (47), born Jan 1853, with his wife "Elizabeth N." (52), born Dec 1847, and 5 children ranging in ages from 23 to 6. They have been married for 29 years and 7 of her 11 children are still living. Arch and Elizabeth were born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents. All the children were born in Kentucky. Arch is a farmer on a farm he owns free of mortgate, and the oldest son is a farm laborer. The second oldest son is a farmer on a rented farm.

1916   A Lee County, Virginia Certificate of Death shows that "James H. Markham" died in Rose Hill on 2 March 1916. He was born in Lee County on 19 January 1836 the son of "Josiah Markham" and "Mary Boles" [Bales?]. The informant was the undertaker Robert Campbell. The death was recorded on 2 March for burial at Edds Cemetery in Rose Hill on 4 March 1916.

1923   Archibald Grubb (Junior) died in 1923. He is buried as "Arch Grubbs" in Clarks Creek Cemetery in Dry Ridge in Grant County, Kentucky.

1935   Elizabeth "Betty" Nancy (Brown) Grubb died in 1935 and is buried as "Betty Grubbs" in the same cemetery.

Grubb family miscellany

Arch Grubbs, born in 1853, died in 1924. He is buried in Clarks Creek Cemetery in Dry Ridge, Grant County, Kentucky. His Commonwealth of Kentucky Certificate of Death states that he died on 23 August 1924 in Downingsville Voting Precinct in Grant County of Uranema, with Chronic Nephritis and Prostatitis as contributory causes. According to the informant, "Joe Grubbs" of Ellington, Kentucky, he was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents -- father "John Grubbs" and mother "Anna Markem". He was slated for burial in "Clarks Creek Cem" on 24 January 1924 by an undertaker in Dry Ridge, Kentucky.

Archibald Grubb (Junior) -- later "Grubbs" -- was born on 28 January 1853 in Rose Hill in Lee County, Virginia. He died on 23 August 1924 in Grant County, Kentucky. His father was Archibald Grubb (Senior) and his mother was his father's 2nd wife, Nancy Annie Markum. Nancy was born in 1828 in Lee County, Virginia, and died on 1 February 1856 in Lee County. Nancy was the mother Archibald Grubb's youngest 3 children -- Martha J. "Mary" Grubb (1848–1889), William "Willie" Grubb (1850–), and Archibald Grubb (1853-1924). She remarried William Hamilton Moles (1834-1864), in Lee County, on 26 June 1856, and took her three Grubb children with him to Rockcastle County in Kentucky, where she gave birth to Sarah Ann Moles on 21 October 1858 according to a scan of a Rockcastle County birth roll which shows her maiden name as "Nancy A. Grub" [sic = Grubb]. Sarah was the 1st of 4 children she apparently had with William Moles before his death, reportedly on 5 February 1864 in Rock Island, Illinois, as a private during the War of the Rebellion. William was born on 14 April 1834 in Patrick County, Virginia, according to some family trees. By the 1870 census, Nancy is back in Lee County, apparently a widow, with John H. [Hamilton] Moles (1865–1923), her last child with William H. Moles. John H. Moles, born on 15 August 1865 [1864] in Rose Hill in Lee County, died on 22 April 1923 in Rose Hill. The 1880 census for Rose Hill Township in Lee County shows "Anna Moles" (50), keeping house, with her son "John Moles" (15).

Top  

John H. Moles Death certificate showing "John Hamilton Moles" as son of "Elihu Moles" and "Harriett Grubb"
Born 7 Aug 1860 in Virginia, died 26 Nov 1930 in Muncie, Delaware County, Indiana
according to "Mrs. Ada I. Horton", his sister
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
John H. Moles Death certificate showing "John Ham Moles" as son of "William Moles" and "Annie Marcum"
Born 28 Aug 1864 in Virginia, died 13 Apr 1923 in Rose Hill, Lee County, Virginia
according to "George Haley"
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Note that while the death certificate for "John Ham Moles" son of William Moles and Annie Grugg (Above) says he was born on 28 August 1864 and died on 13 April 1923, the tombstone of "John H. Moles" (right) says he was born 15 Aug 1865 and died 22 Apr 1923. The names of the cemeteries are also different.

Son of Elihu H. and Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles
Headstone of John H. Moles -- "1860-1930"
Beach Grove Cemetery, Muncie, Delaware County, Indiana
Photograph by Jane copped from Find a Grave
William H. Moles
Son of William H. and Nancy A. (Markham) (Grubb) Moles
Tombstone of John H. Moles -- "Aug. 15, 1865 / Apr. 22, 1923"
Trent Cemetery, Rose Hill, Lee County, Virginia
John's wife Rachel Moles also buried in Trent Cemetery
Photograph by Phillip Cheek copped from Find a Grave
Click on image to enlarge
John H. Moles

The Moles family

  1. 26 May 1856   Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin remarries Elihu Harden Moles (c1838-1890). She brings William L. Baldwin to the marriage, and would have at least 3 more children with Elihu. Little William grew up a Moles and then a Baldwin. He married as a Baldwin, and in 1903-1905 his daughter, Lulu May (Baldwin) Posterwait, with the help of her grandmother Harriet Moles, won an equity case in Lee County Chancery Court, in which she claimed to be the legal heir of 1/6th of her great-grandfather John M. Baldwin's Rose Hill, Lee County farm. See John M. Baldwin's last will and testament (above) for details.
  2. 26 June 1856   Nancy Ann (Markham) Grubbs, Harriet (Grubb) (Baldwin) Moles's step-mother, remarries William Hamilton Moles (1834-1864), Elihu H. Moles younger brother. A step-mother and step-daughter thus become sisters-in-law.
    1. The Moles brothers were sons of William S. and Elizabeth Moles. The Moles family is enumerated in Stokes County, Virginia, in 1850 with 11 children, and in Pulaski County, Kentucky, in 1860 with 9 children -- 2 new children, minus William and Elihu, and Elbert Leander Moles. William and Elihu have married widowed Grubb and Baldwin wives. Elbert, born on 17 November 1839 in Palmer County, Virginia, died on 19 August 1855 in Martins Creek, Lee County, Virginia. His parents were "Wm. S. Moles" and "Elizabeth Moles".
    2. During the 1850s, between the 1850 and 1860 censuses, the Moles family was sojourning in the western part of Lee County. One family tree cites a Lee County record which shows that, on 23 October 1857, "William S. Moles and Elizabeth, his wife, Sold for the sum of $1050 to Jacob Wolfenbarger, Sr. 'A certain tract of land lying in Lee County on the waters of Martin's Creek'" (Ancestry.com).
    3. Contact between the Moles, Grubb, and Baldwin families is suggested in records which show that on 9 November 1852, "William S. Moles" purchased a couple of items from the personal estate of Archibald Grubb -- as did both John M. and John R. Baldwin and other Grubb and Baldwin neighbors. See Grubb brothers vs. Robert M. Bales (below) for details.
  3. The 1860 census for the Mt. Veron Post Office area of Rockcastle County in Kentucky shows the houseold of "Wm H. Moles" (26) with "Ann Moles" (31) and 4 children -- "Martha Grubb" (13), "Wm. Grubb" (11), "Arch Grubb" (7), and "Sarah A. Moles" (1). All were born in Virginia except Sarah, who was born in Kentucky. Nancy Ann brought the 3 Grubb children to the marriage. Legal actions taken in the late 1880s by Archibald and William Grubb suggest that Robert M. Bales continued to be their legal guardian.
  4. 18 April 1863   William H. Moles enlists in Lee County, Virginia, in Company I or the 27th Virginia Cavalry Battalion.
  5. 20 May 1863   William H. Moles joined station, apparently in the vicinity of Lee County, Virinia.
  6. 9 October or 9 December 1863   William H. Moles is captured at Jonesville in Lee County, Virginia, according to one manuscript record (date not dittoed). Another manuscript record says 9 December 1863 (date dittoed). October and December are a toss up. Union forces gained control of Cumberland Gap in September and mounted raids in Lee County, including Jonesville, its seat, in October and November 1863, and there were battles in Jonesville in January 1864. William H. Moles was sent to a Union prisoner-of-war camp in Louisville, Kentucky. The distance from Jonesville, Virginia to Louisville, Kentucky, through Cumberland Gap, today, is roughly 240 miles (385 kilometers). By automobile it would take about 4 hours non-stop. On foot it would take 8-12 days (20-30 miles/day) more or less. 100 days elasped between his capture at Jonesville and his 17 January 1864 "discharge" at Lousiville, Kentucky if captured on 9 October 1863 -- 39 days if captured on 9 December.
  7. 17 January 1864   William H. Moles is "discharged" from the prisoner-of-war camp in Louisville, Kentucky, and "sent to" a camp in Rock Island, Illinois. The distance from Louisville, Kentucky, to Rock Island, Illinois, today, is roughly 420 miles (670 kilometers). By automobile it would take about 6-1/2 hours non-stop. On foot it would take 14-21 days (20-30 miles/day) more or less. 19 days elasped between his "discharge" at Lousiville Kentucky and his 5 February 1864 death at Rock Island, Illinois. William H. Moles probably took sick enroute.
  8. 5 February 1864   William H. Moles, bunked in Barrack 58 (one record suggests 59) in the prisoner-of-war facility at Rock Island, Illinois, dies of "Variola" (smallpox). He is buried in grave 378 in Section A "south of prison barracks". The vertical gravestone appears to bear only the grave number, and his name and military unit.
  9. 28 August 1864   John Hamilton Moles was born in Lee County on or about this date, around 7-1/2 months after his father's death. Assuming he is William's son, if his mother carried him for 9 months, then he would have been conceived around November 1863. If, as it appears, William was stationed in Lee County, he would have been able to visit his wife. Conception between late October and early December supports a 9 December rather than 9 October date of captivity. He might even have been captured while visiting his wife.
  10. The 1870 census for Rose Hill Township in Lee County Kentucky shows the household of "Nancy A. Moles" (43) with a personal estate worth $200 and 4 children -- 2 Moles children, "Sarah A. Moles" (12) and "John W. Moles" (6) -- and 2 Grubb children, "William Grubb" (21) and "Archibald Grubb" (17). Nancy is keeping house, her 2 children are at home, and the Grubb boys are working the farm. All were born in Lee County, Virginia, except Sarah, who was born in Rockcastle County, Kentucky. Among those the older household members, all can read, but Nancy and Sarah Moles, and Archibald Grubb, cannot write.
  11. The 1880 census for Rose Hill Township in Lee County shows "Anna Moles" (50), keeping house, with her son "John Moles" (15), the last of at least 4 children she had with William H. Moles before his death on 5 February 1864.
    1. I find no unambiguous records of Nancy Ann (Markham) (Grubb) Moles's existence after this -- hence the provision "aft 1880". Records regarding John H. Moles (1864-1923) show the usual problems with spellings of names and birth and death dates, but clearly establish his descent from William H. and Nancy Ann Moles.
    2. "John H. Moles", age 22, born in 1865 in Lee County, Virginia, father "W.H. Moles", mother "N. Moles", married "Rachael Gollahan", age 23, born in 1864 in Lee County, Virginia, father "Jas Gollahan", in Lee County, Virginia, on 20 January 1887, according to a transcription (not a scan) of a Virginia marriage record.
  12. The 1900 census for the Bales Forge Voting Precinct of Rose Hill in Lee County shows "John H. Moles" (35), born Aug 1864, with his wife "Rachel" [nee "Rachael A. Gallohan] (35), born Sept 1864, and 2 children. They have been married for 13 years and 2 of her 4 children are still living. All were born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents. He is a farmer on a rented farm. Rachel cannot read or write. The surviving children were their 1st and 2nd born, James Henry Moles (1888-1956) and Florence Mae "Flossie" Moles (1890–1970).
  13. The 1910 census for the Bales Forge Precinct in the Rose Hill District of Lee County shows "John H. Moles" (46) and "Rachel A." (46) with 1 son, "Henry J." (21). They have been married 22 years and 2 of her 4 children are still living. John is a farmer on a general farm he owns free of mortgage. Henry is a farm laborer, presumably working for his father.
  14. The 1920 census for Rose Hill Magisterial District of Lee County shows "John H. Moles" (54) with his wife "Rachel A." (54) farming on a general farm he owns free of mortgage and operates on his own account.
  15. 13 April 1923   John Hamilton Moles is "John Ham Moles" on his Rose Hill Magisterial District death certificate, which says he was born in Virginia on "August 28th 1864" and died on "April 13th 1923". His father was Virginia-born "William Moles" and his mother was Virginia-born "Annie Marcum". The certificate was filed on 13 April 1923, and burial was slated for 14 April 1923 in "Sloane Graveyard" in Rose Hill. However, his tombstone in "Trent Cemetery" in Rose Hill reads "JOHN H. MOLES / "born / Aug. 15, 1865 / died / Apr. 22, 1923 / Gone but not forgotten". His wife is buried in the same cemetery as "RACHEL MOLES / Sept 16, 1864 / Nov. 15, 1940 / GONE HOME".
    1. If John H. Moles was his father's son, and if his father died on 5 February 1864 as several contemporary records show, then John H. Moles was born in or about August 1864 as the 1900 census and his 1923 death certificate state. However, Union military records show that William H. Moles was in captivity in Louisville, Kentucky, and then at Rock Island, Illinois at the time it would seem that John H. Moles was concevied. See Private William H. Moles (below) for details.
  16. John H. Moles is also "John Ham Moles" and Rachael is "Rachel Golhorn" on the Rose Hill, Lee County death certificate of their son "James Henry Moles" (1888-1956). The cause of death was certified by "Thomas S. Ely, M.D., Coroner" of Jonesville. James Henry Moles (1888-1956) and his wife, Laura Bradford (Brock) Moles (1901-1972), are buried at Bradford-Daniel Family Cemetery in Rose Hill.

Elbert L. Moles, born about 1840 in Palmer County, Virginia, died on 19 August 1855 in Martins Creek, Lee County, Virginia. His parents were "Wm. S. Moles" and "Elizabeth Moles".

William S. Moles was born in 1812 in Patrick County, Virginia, and died in 1868 in Ohio. Elizabeth (Lewis) Moles was born in 1813 in Patrick County, Virginia, and died on 18 May 1880 in Hancock County, Tennessee.

William and Elizabeth Moles moved a lot. The 1850 census shows them living in Snow Creek in Stokes County, Virginia, with 11 children, 18-1 years old. The 1860 census shows the family residing in District No. 1 of Pulaski County, Kentucky, with 9 children, 30-5 years old (2 new children), all born in Virginia. By 1870 they are in Jackson in Greene County, Indiana, with 2 children, 13-10 (1 new child), the youngest born in Kentucky.

Nancy Ann Moles step-daughter, Harriet Grubbs married William Baldwin and bearing him a son around 1851-1853. was widowed around 1853-1855, , early 1850s, had remarried then been widowed by his death, (Grubbs)

Jacob Wolfensbarger, born in Virginia in 1786, married Nancy Sloan, in Virginia, in 1807.

The 1850 census shows "Jacob Wolfensbarger" (63) with his wife "Nancy" (64) and 2 children, "Susanah" (35) and "Milly" (26). He is farming on real estate valued at $200. Only Milly is able to read and write.

Jacob Wolfenbarger (Junior) died on 19 August 1865.

Jacom Wolfenbarger (Senior), born in Greenbrier County, Virginia, died in August 1859 in Lee County, Virginia. The 1860 Mortality Schedule for the Western District of Lee County enumerates "Jacob Wolfenbarger", age 72, born in Virginia, a farmer, died in August 1859 of "Consumption" after 30 days of llness.

Jacob Wolfenbarger (Junior), born on 30 June 1825, died on 21 September 1864 in Rose Hill, in Lee County, Virginia, and is buried in Grubbs-Wolfenbarger Cemetery in Rose Hill.

Elbert L. Moles, born about 1840 in Palmer County, Virginia, died on 19 August 1855 in Martins Creek, Lee County, Virginia. His parents were "Wm. S. Moles" and "Elizabeth Moles".

William S. Moles was born in 1812 in Patrick County, Virginia, and died in 1868 in Ohio. Elizabeth (Lewis) Moles was born in 1813 in Patrick County, Virginia, and died on 18 May 1880 in Hancock County, Tennessee.

William and Elizabeth Moles moved a lot. The 1850 census shows them living in Snow Creek in Stokes County, Virginia, with 11 children, 18-1 years old. The 1860 census shows the family residing in District No. 1 of Pulaski County, Kentucky, with 9 children, 30-5 years old (2 new children), all born in Virginia. By 1870 they are in Jackson in Greene County, Indiana, with 2 children, 13-10 (1 new child), the youngest born in Kentucky.

Nancy Ann (Markham) Grubb's step-daughter, Harriet Grubbs, married William Baldwin and bore him a son around 1851-1853. Harriet was widowed around 1852-1854, and on 26 May 1856 she remarried Elihu Moles, the younger brother of William Moles, who her step-mother, widowed in 1852, would remarry on 26 June 1856 just 1 month later. And so a 28-year-old widowed step-mother, and her 20-year-old widowed step-daughter, became sisters-in-law.

  1. William Hamilton Moles (1834-1864), Nancy Ann (Markham) Grubb's 2nd husband, was an older brother of Elihu Hardin Moles (1838–1890), the 2nd husband of Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin's second husband. Nancy Ann Markham, when marrying Archibald Grubb, became Harriet Grubb's step mother, though Nancy Ann was only was only. As wives of brothers, they the step-mother and step-daughter became sisters in law.
  2. Martha J. Grubb was the first of three children of Archibald Grubb's 2nd wife Nancy Ann Markham.
  3. William Hamilton Moles (1834-1864), Nancy Ann (Markham) Grubb's 2nd husband, was an older brother of Elihu Hardin Moles (1838–1890), the 2nd husband of Harriet (Grubb) Baldwin's second husband. Nancy Ann Markham, when marrying Archibald Grubb, became Harriet Grubb's step mother, though Nancy Ann was only was only. As wives of brothers, they the step-mother and step-daughter became sisters in law.
  4. Martha J. Grubb was the first of three children of Archibald Grubb's 2nd wife Nancy Ann Markham.

Top  

Grubb brothers vs. Robert M. Bales

Archibald Grubb Jr. vs. Robert M. Bales, 1887-1888
Inheritence accounts settled with guardian 30 years later

Grubb complaint Court decision

Click on images to enlarge

LeftFebruary 1887 bill filed in Lee County Chancery Court by Archibald Grubb against R.M. Bales
1st page of 6-page complaint alleging that R.M. Bales, his guardian and administor of his father's real and personal estate, had failed to make good on payments of amounts owed him from sales of his property

Right1 September 1887 court order directing appointed commissioner to settle accounts
by charging the defendant, the plaintiff's guardian, with all estate he received or should have received as the administrator of the plaintiff's father's estate, giving credit for all proper disbursments

All images related to this case are cropped from a file of documents indexed as 1888-016 in the
Chancery Records Index of the Library of Virginia and Virginia Memory Digital Collections
(Search under Lee County for Defendant "Grubb")

The 1888-016 index number signifies the year that the matters raised by the bill were resolved and the case was closed. The on-line file contains scans of 41 pages of documents. The scans can be viewed through the Virginia Memory, Chancery Records Index portal. They can also be downloaded in a zip file which somewhat inconveniently contains separate rather than bundled pdf files -- and pdf rather than jpg files. However, each of the zipped files can be opened at will in any recent version of Adobe Reader. All images shown here are those I clipped as jpg files from the received pdf files

Grubb deposition Grubb desposition

Click on images to enlarge

Left18 October 1852 court assigns Robert M. Bales the administrator of Archibald Grubb's estate
pursuant to written relinquishment of right to administration by Grubb's widow Nancy Ann Grubb

Right21 March 1853 court assigns Robert M. Bales the guardian of
Martha Jane Grubb, William Grubb, and Archibald Grubb

described as "orphans of Archibald Grubb deceased" rather than as children of Nancy Ann Grubb

Inventory Inventory

Click on images to enlarge
8 November 1852 inventory of Archibald Grubb's personal property
Prepared by John M. Baldwin and others

Receipts Receipts
Receipts Receipts

Click on images to enlarge
9 November 1852 and 21 January 1853 accounts of property sold by Robert M. Bales
Receipts by name of purchaser, decription of property, and unit price and total
Sold to many people, including Baldwin neighbors and Grubb family members
Recorded with other receipts 30 May 1860

William Grubb vs. Robert M. Bales, 1887
Contesting guardian's administration of father's mill

Summons

7 February 1903 court order commanding Lee County sheriff to summon Robert M. Bales
to appear at the Clerk's office of Lee County Circuit Court on Monday, 6 July 1885,
"to answer a bill in chancery exhibited against him" by Archibald Grubb

All images related to this case are cropped from a file of documents indexed as 1888-035 in the
Chancery Records Index of the Library of Virginia and Virginia Memory Digital Collections
(Search under Lee County for Defendant "Grubb")

Grubb brothers vs. Robert M. Bales

1885-1888 equity bills regarding 1852 inheritance

Orphans question guardian's administration of father's estate
  1. 18 October 1852   "A Writing under the hand and seal of Nancy Ann Grubb widow of Archibald Grubb deceased by which she relinquished her right to the administration of the said decedents estate in favor of Robert M. Bales was favored in court by the oath of William J. Bales a witness thereto and is ordered to be recognized, And on the motion of Robert M. Bales who made oath as Administrator, and together with Stephen Bales, Hunter Edds and William S. Ely his securities entered into an acknowledged a bond in the penalty of $1000. conditioned as the law directs. Certificate is granted for obtaining letters of administration on the estate of the said Archibald Grubb deceased in due form." (Case 1888-016, Grubb vs. Bales, page 19, Library of Virginia and Virginia Memory Digital Collections, Chancery Records Index)
  2. 21 March 1853   "The Court [of Lee County, Virginia] doth assign Robert M. Bales guardian to Martha Jane Grubb, William Grubb and Archibald Grubb orphans of Archibald Grubb deceased, and therefore the said Robert M. Bales with William S. Ely his security entered into and acknowledge a bond in the penalty of $400.00 with condition according to law." (Case 1888-016, Grubb vs. Bales, page 21, Library of Virginia and Virginia Memory Digital Collections, Chancery Records Index)

In the fall of 1852, Archibald Grubb died intestate. R.M. Bales became the administrator of Archibald Grubb's personal estate and the guardian of the 3 youngest Grubb children. And John M. Baldwin is first listed among the few neighbors who itemized Archibald's personal property for the purpose of selling it. John M. Baldwin, his son's John R. baldwin and William Baldwin, and his son-in-law James A. Thomas (Mary Ann's husband), were among the many neighbors who then bought some of the items.

Some of Archibald Grubb's older children also bought a few of his things. Why? Wouldn't they just have been able to take what they wanted? No. He died without a will -- which is tantamount to leaving everything to all his heirs by law -- beginning with his wife, then his children. By law, Archibald Grubb's children were entited to equal shares of his property but had no rights to any particular items. If a sibling wanted something, the sibling had to buy it. The sibling's share would come back to the sibling when the proceeds were divided among all the siblings.

Archibald Grubb and John M. Baldwin were fence neighbors. And 2 Grubb children, Lorenzo and Harriet, would marry 2 Baldwin children, Sarah and William.

The 1850 census enumerates the household's of Archibald Grubb and John R. Baldwin, John M. Baldwin's son, on the same sheet. John R. Baldwin's home may have been located on a part of John M. Baldwin's farm closest to the home of Archibald Grubb.

Archibald Grubb's death in the fall of 1852 was one of many deaths that took a toll on families during the mid 1850s. John R. Baldwin's brother William would die around 1853-1854, and John R. Baldwin's wife Rebecca would die in 1855. John's and William's father, Milton B. Baldwin, perhaps learning a lesson from the death intestate of his neighbor and in-law relative Archibald Grubb in 1852 -- then witnessessing the death of his own son in 1854-1854, and possibly not well and concerned about the fate of his own real and personal estate -- made a proper will on 2 March 1855. By the end of the year, his daughter-in-law Rebecca, and two more of his own young children, then he himself, had died -- soon after which another child and Margaret died. By 20 March 1858, the 11-strong Baldwin-Seal family had shrunk to 4 adult and 2 minor children.

Proceeds from the sale of Archibald Grubb's personal property were to be dispersed to his heirs -- "his widow and nine children" according to claims made in equity bills raised in Lee County's chancery court in 1888 by two of his children. His personal property was sold off, and itemized sales record record the names of the purchasers, most of them his neighbors -- including John M. Baldwin, John M.'s sons John R. Baldwin and William Baldwin, and John M.'s son-in-law James A. Thomas, but also a few of Archibald Grubb's own adult children.

In 1888, two of the children presented equity bills to the chancery court of Lee County alleging that R.M. Bales owed them money -- that, as the administrator of the sales of the personal estate of Archibald Grubb, he had not settled accounts regarding proceeds from sales of the personal property with the Grubb children over whom he had also been made guardian.

Digital scans of documents related to both cases come from two files indexed as "1888-016 Archibald Grubb v. R.M. Bales GDN" and "1886-035 William Grubb v. R.M. Bales GDN". Search for "Grubb" in Library of Virginia, Digital Collection, Virginia Memories, Chancery Records Index).

On 21 March 1853, the court of Lee County ordered to "assign R.M. Bales guardian to Martha Jane Grubb, William Grubb, and Archibald Grubb orphans of Archibald Grubb deceased. Therefore the said Robert M. Bales with William S. Ely his security entered into and acknowledged a bond in the penalty of $400.00 with condition according to law." (Lee County Chancery Records Index 1888-016, Archibald Grubb v R.M. Bales GDN, ).

In the 1st case, "Archibald Grubb Jr. An "Inventory of property sold by Robt. Bales Administrator of Archibald Grugg Deed November 9th 1852 to wit" itemizes property by the buyer, property, and price. The names and items include the following (pages 25-28).

James A. Thomas   1 hand saw                .30
William S. Moles  1 Auger & Chisel      .45
                  1 [unread words]         2.00   2.45
Ann Grubb           [ 5 items ]                  11.55
William Baldwin   1 plow                    .41
     Same         1 lot of cherry plank     .41
     Same         1 Iron Gray horse       75.00  75.81
Edward B. Bales   1 Barshear Plow          2.60
Lorenzo Grubb       [ 7 items ]                  29.52
John M. Baldwin   1 Lot Flax seeds         1.81
     Same         1 Bee Stand              1.80
     Same         1 Buck Wheat              .22   3.23 [sic = 3.83]
John R. Baldwin   1 Lot Rye                 .75
     Same         1 Bee Stand              1.60
     Same         1 Book                    .67
     Same         1 fur Strechers [sic]    1.60   4.62
Eliza Grubb       1 beds & Furniture   2.00   2.00
------------------------------------------------------
                January 21st 1853.              340.67

John M. Baldwin  25 Bushels of Corn 23/B
                           & Tobacco    6.00   6.00
Lorenzo Grubb     [ 5 items ]                     15.60
John R. Baldwin   1½ B. Do. [Wheat]         .50     .75
     Same        25  Corn 28/B             7.00    7.75
William Baldwin   1 Lot Rye for  8/B        .80     .80
Ann Grubb           [ 3 items ]                   13.63
-------------------------------------------------------
                Total                    572.73  572.73

At the clerks office of the County Court of Lee County
the 30th day of May 1860.
A sale bill of the personal property of Archibald
Grubb deceased, was this day admitted to
Records.    Teste H. J. Hagan Clerk.
     A copy Teste J. R. Gibson Clk.

In the case of Archibald Grubb [Jr.] v. R.M. Bales, the Circuit Court, on 1 September 1887, appointed a Court in the person of H. C. Joslyn and ordered him to settle the dispute. The Circuit Court recognized the claims of the plaintiff, and held R.M. Bales accountable for his acts as both the administrator of Archibald Grubb's personal estate and the plaintiff's guardian. Accordingly R.M. Bales was charged with everything he received as administrator and/or guardian, and would be credited for everything he properly disbursed.

18 October 1852, Monday   The widow of Archibald Grubb, at the County Court of Lee County, relinquished "under hand and seal" the right to the administration of her husband's estate to Robert M. Bales. The motion to make Robert M. Bales the administrator was witnessed by William J. Bales, and the court -- with Hunter Edds, Stephen Bales, and William S. Ely as securities -- granted Robert M. Bales a certificate for obtaining letters of administration on Archibald Grubb's estate (page 19).

8 November 1852   John M. Baldwin appears at the head the list of 4 neighbors who have itemized and appraised Archibald Grubb's personal belongings in preparation for their sale. The inventory begins as follows (pages 31-32, case 1888-016, Archibald Grubb v. R.M. Bales GDN, Lee County, Virginia, Chancery Court).

We John M. Baldwin, Archibald Burkhanon, Archibald H. Fulkerson and Nathan Morgan have proceeded to appraise all the Personal Estate of Archibald Grubb deed November 8th 1852.

of also participated with

9 November 1852 and 21 January 1853   Inventories of items sold by name of purchaser, item, and amount received -- one list dated 9 November 1852, another list dated 21 January 1853 -- both apparently filed and recorded in Lee County Court on 30 May 1860. (Pages 25-28)

21 March 1853, Monday   Lee County Court assigns Robert M. Bales as "guardian to Martha Jane Grubb, William Grubb and Archibald Grubb [Jr.] orphans of Archibald Grubb deceased, and, therefore, the said Robert M. Bales with William S. Ely his security entered into and acknowledged a bond in the penalty of $400 with condition according to law." (Page 21)

19 August 1853 to June 1854   Yet another list of transactions and receipts dated from 19 August 1853 to as late as June 1854 was apparently filed and recorded at the county court on 30 May 1860. (Page 29)

Top  

Slavery in Lee County

McKnight 2006

Cumberland Gap on jacket of Brian D.McKnight's Contested Borderland, 2006
"The Civil War in Appalachian Kentucky and Virginia"
Yosha Bunko scan

Brian D. McKnight
Contestd Borderland The Civil War in Appalachian Kentucky and Virginia
Lexington (Kentucky): The University Press of Kentucky, 2006
xi, 312 pages, hardcover, illustrations

Slavery in Lee County, Virginia

I can find no record of slaving by the stem families of the Baldwin-Seale and Baldwin-Howard lines. However, John M. Baldwin and his son John R. Baldwin had dealings with slave-owning families, and they were partly related to one of Lee County's most prominent industrialists, who owned slaves.

One of the major slave owners in Lee County, Virginia, was Robert M. Bales, who had iron furnaces and forges around Rose Hill near Jonesville, where the Baldwin's farmed. Bales was not only a benefactor of the family but a collateral relative of the Baldwins in Virginia's Lee County, a mostly agricultural but partly industrial county.

Slaves accounted for between 7 and 8 percent of the population of Lee County, Virginia, in the 1850 and 1860 censuses -- slightly higher than average among Central Appalachian Divide counties in Virginia and Kentucky before the Civil War, as reported by Brian D. McKnight in his 2006 study of the Civil War in Virginia and Kentucky (see image and biographical particulars to the right).

The following table is my summarization of figures from McKnight's tabulations of 1850 and 1860 census data for Lee County, Virginia, and Owsley County, Kentucky -- picked from his enumerations of "Total Population" and "Total Slaves", and his computations of "Percentage Slave", for the several counties in each state that comprise what he calls the "Central Appalachian Divide" (McKnight 2006, pages 17-18, Tables 1-2).

In the following table, the "Growth" percents are mine. The growth percents are computed as increases in the 1860 figures from the 1850 figures -- hence "percent growth" = 100 * (1860-1850)/1850.

         Total       Slave       Percentage
Census   Population  Population  Slave

Lee County, Virginia
1850     10,267        787       7.67%
1860     11,032        824       7.47%
--------------------------------------
Growth    7.45%      4.79%      -2.56%

Owsley County, Kentucky
1850      3,774        136       3.60%
1860      5,335        112       2.10%
--------------------------------------
Growth   41.36%    -17.65%     -15.02%

Total Central Appalacian Divide
1850    127,162      9,313       7.32%
1860    160,157      9,968       6.22%
--------------------------------------
Growth   25.95%      7.03%     -41.74%

Table 1 in McKnight 2006 (page 17) shows 1850 census figures for 6 Virginia and 13 Kentucky counties (total 19 counties). Table 2 (page 18) shows 1860 census figures for 8 Virginia and 15 Kentucky counties (total 23 counties). The 1850 and 1860 censuses were the first and last to have slave schedules. Earlier censuses enumerated all classifications of people, including slaves, on the same sheet. Slavery ended in 1865, after all households were enumerated on the same sheets while individuals were individuals were classified by "Color or race".

Between 1850 and 1860, some county boundaries are changing, and some new counties are created, which limits the comparability of figures for some counties. More important, however, are relative changes in general and non-slave populations by locality and state.

McKnight lists the counties in alphabetical order regardless of state, and he shows totals for all counties in the list. It would have been more interesting to group the counties by state and show state subtotals. And it would have been more revealing to show increases (or decreases) in total and slave populations, which I have shown as percents of "Change".

Note in particular the following "Change" computations.

  1. Changes in total and slave populations in Lee County, VA, and Owsley County, KY, 1850-1860
  2. Between 1850 and 1850, Owsley County has grown over 5 times as much as Lee County.
  3. The slave population in Lee County grows much slower than the total population, resulting in a negative relative increase in the number of slaves.
  4. The slave population in Owsley County significantly drops, as does its relative increase.
  5. The total slave population of the entire Central Appalachian Divide increases only about 25 percent the rate of the total population, and the relative slave population drops nearly 42 percent.

The above figures suggest that non-slave migration is greater than slave migration, resulting in lower percents of slaves. The drop in the number of slaves in Owsley county may be due to (1) a net emigration of slaves, (2) more deaths than births among slaves, (3) emancipation of some slaves, or (4) some combination of these 3 causes of population change.

The above demographic trends reflect conditions immediately before the Civil War. How the war affected migrations of the non-slave and slave populations is not clear. The migration of the Baldwin-Howard and some related families during the war, from Lee County in Virginia, a hotly contested territory, to safer places in Kentucky, was probably fairly common. A comparison of 1850, 1860, and 1870 census data by county classifications, broken down by number and size of households, gender and age, and slave/non-slave and color or race classifications, would probably reveal some interesting patterns.

Top  


1850 Lee County Slave Schedule

Tabulations by William Wetherall

1850 census records for District 31 of Lee County, Virginia, include 10 "Schedule 2 -- Slave Inhabitants" enumeration sheets. Each sheet has 2 columns, left and right, and each column has numbered lines for 42 slaves. Each column has columns for "Names of Slave Owner" / "Number of Slaves" / "Description Age Sex Race" / "Fugitives from the State" / "Number manumitted" / "Deaf & dumb, blind, insane, or idiotic".

The "Description" and "Deaf & dumb et cetera" columns are not unique to the Slave Schedule. Some census takers also recorded the names of the slaves in the first column, but the Lee County sheets show only the name of the owner, and the slaves are grouped by owner.

On all 10 sheets, every slave is individually listed and the "Number of Slaves" box shows "1" for each slave. "Age" is in round years but infants under 1 show number of months. "Sex" is conventionally "M" or "F". "Race could be any "Color or race", but these 10 sheets show only "B" (Black) or "M" (Mulatto). None of the slaves are marked as being unable to hear or speak or otherwise incapacitated.

The first 9 sheets are full and the 10th sheet lists 31 slaves, for a total of 787 slaves. Handwritten at the bottom of each column are subtotals by sex.

The following breakdowns, by sex and race, and combinations thereof, and percents of total, are my own tallies and computations.

1850 census slave schedule tallies
District 31, Lee County, Virginia

By sex       By race         By race and sex
                             Black          Mulatto
Male Female  Black Mulatto   Male  Female   Male  Female
 378    409    644     143    307     337     71      72
48.0   52.0   81.8    18.2   39.0    42.8    9.0     9.1
 787  100.0    787   100.0    787                  100.0

The 787 slaves are enumerated for 159 owners, or nearly 5 (4.95) slaves per owner. The distribution of ownership by number of slaves, however, shows that most slave owners -- 47 or 29.6 percent -- owned only 1 slave. The median ownership was slightly less than 3 slaves -- 83 or 52 percent owned 3 or fewer slaves.

Numbers                  Accumulated     
Slaves                   Numbers         Percents
/owner  Owners  Slaves   Owners  Slaves  Owners  Slaves
     1      47      47       47      47    29.6     6.0
     2      19      38       66      85    41.5    10.8
     3      17      51       83     136    52.2    17.3
     4      15      60       98     196    61.6    24.9
     5      14      70      112     266    70.4    33.8
     6       9      54      121     320    76.1    40.7
     7       7      49      128     369    80.5    46.9
     8       7      56      135     425    84.9    54.0
     9       4      36      139     461    87.4    58.6
    10       0       0      139     461    87.4    58.6
 11-20      16     227      155     688    10.1    28.8
 21-30       4      99      159     787     2.5    12.6
-------------------------------------------------------
Totals     159     787                    100.0   100.0
        Owners  Slaves                   Owners  Slaves
 

My first observation is that I counted 787 slaves on Lee County's 1850 slave schedule -- which agrees with McKnight's count (see above). This is not surprising, since we used the same publicly available census sheets. My tabulations, however, preserve the original sex and racial classifications, which allow the following observations.

  1. Sex and racial mixture patterns among slaves in Lee County, Virginia, 1850
  2. The majority of the 159 slave owners (52.2 percent) had 1-3 slaves, accounting for 17.3 percent of the 787 slaves.
  3. The majority of the 787 slaves (54.0 percent) were owned by 84.9 percent of the slave owners, who had 1-8 slaves.
  4. 87.4 percent (139) of the slave owners had from 1-10 slaves, accounting for 58.6 percent (461) of the slaves, or 3.3 slaves per owner.
  5. 10.1 percent (16) of the owners had from 11-20 slaves, accounting for 28.8 percent (227) of the slaves, averaging 14.2 slaves per owner.
  6. 2.5 percent (4) of the owners had from 21-30 slaves, accounting for 12.6 percent (99) of the slaves, or 24.8 slaves per owner.

I do not yet have total counts of Lee County households and the non-slave population in 1850. I anticipate that such figures will show that the vast majority of households did not own slaves or directly depend on slave labor. However, as I have shown in the case of my own Baldwin-Howard progenitors, households that had no slaves had social and business relations with slave-holding families, and they otherwise survived in local economies that involved and benefited from slave labor.

To what extent personal views of slavery among Lee County families that did not have slaves, affected their migration to Kentucky or elsewhere before or during the Civil War, is an academically interesting question but probably not one that that can be answered -- obviously because the principals are gone and hence unable to account for their decisions to stay or leave -- but also because personal feelings about slavery might not be the most important motivating factors.

Top  


Martha Grace Lowry Mize on slavery in Lee County

Martha Grace Lowry Mize, in The Lee County Story, a web-published article dated 2017 (read 23 November 2020), makes the following remarks, based on Williams 2002 and McKnight 2006. I have shown descriptions of both sources based on her list of "References Cited". I have only McKnight's book.

Slavery was a major national issue during the first half of the nineteenth century, although the majority of southwestern Virginia residents did not own slaves. According to Williams (2002:125), "Appalachia differed significantly from both of its parent regions, Pennsylvania and the plantation south." An emphasis on cotton industries set the region apart from its slowly commercializing northern neighbors, while a general lack of reliance on slavery placed Appalachia in a separate category from the South (Williams 2002:126). Although not as prevalent as in other parts of the south, slavery was present in Appalachia as a part of its economy, which primarily included, ". . . ironmaking, salt making, and mountain resorts” (Williams 2002:126-127). This differed from the rest of the South, where slaves were the major source of labor for plantation economies. In the Appalachian South iron-making required large quantities of timber, cut and moved by mostly slave labor, to support the massive furnaces required to convert the resources into valuable metals (Williams 2002:127). Salt-making was a mining practice that involved difficult labor done by slaves (Williams 2002:129). While mountain resorts and tourism were a part of the Appalachia economy due to the picturesque scenery, this was less of an economic factor in southwest Virginia (Williams 2002:132-133).

Williams 2002
John Alexander Williams
Appalachia: A History
Chapel Hill and London: The University of North Carolina Press

Online searches for slaves within the Lee County 1840 (National Archives and Records Administration 1840) United States Federal Census shows approximately 398 slaves in Lee County, Virginia; however, the burning of the courthouse records makes obtaining more definitive data difficult. McKnight (2006:17) estimates the slave population of Lee County at 787 or 7.67% of the county's total population in 1850 (McKnight 2006:17). By 1860, total slave population increased, but percentages of Lee County slave population decreased only slightly (7.47%) (McKnight 2006:18). The change in slave versus total population during the period from 1850-1860, according to McKnight, is actually a downward trend as compared to other slave-holding states. Unlike other surrounding Appalachian counties whose slave populations fluctuated, Lee County consistently had the fifth-highest percentage of slaves (McKnight 2006:18).

McKnight 2006
Brian Dallas McKnight
Contested Borderland: The Civil War in Appalachian Kentucky and Virginia
Lexington (Kentucky): University of Kentucky Press

Broad demographic overviews like this help characterize the general conditions that prevailed around the time of the Civil War when the Baldwin-Howard and other families were struggling to survive. But the realities come closer to home when looking at actual slave-owning families, especially those with whom the Baldwins are known to have contact.

Top  


1850 and 1860 Lee County slave schedules
for selected Rose Hill slave owners

Tabulations by William Wetherall

1850 slave schedules for Lee County list, as follows, the slaves owned by Joshua Ewing and Robert M. Bales, whose slave holdings are enumerated in succession on the same sheet -- by age, sex (M = male, F = female), and race (B = black, M = mulatto).

Slaves held by Robert M. Bales and Joshua Ewing
Rose Hill neighbors of John M. and Elizabeth Baldwin

1850 slave schedule

Robert M. Bales   5 slaves
3FB, 20FM, 12MB, 6FB, 4MB

            Black  Mulatto
   Male       2       0       2
   Female     2       1       3
   ----------------------------
              4       1       5           

Joshua Ewing   7 slaves
40FB, 20FB, 18MB, 16MB, 14FB, 11MB, 5FB

            Black  Mulatto
   Male       3       0       3
   Female     4       0       4
   ----------------------------
              7       0       7           

Samuel Ewing   30 slaves
30FB, 30MB, 8FB, 5MB, 3FB, 1FB, 25FB, 4MB,
34FB, 13FB, 9FB, 6FB, 5MB, 2MB,16FB, 25FB,
19FB, 8FB, 6MB, 3/12FB, 5/12FB, 60FB, 45MB,
44MB, 40MB, 30FB, 7FB, 6FB, 4FB, 9/12FB

            Black  Mulatto
   Male       9       0       9
   Female    21       0      21
   ----------------------------
             30       0      30           

William Thompson   5 slaves
35FB, 11MB, 7FB, 5FB, 1MB

            Black  Mulatto
   Male       2       0       2
   Female     3       0       3
   ----------------------------
              5       0       5           

William Thompson   1 slave
30MB

            Black  Mulatto
   Male       2       0       2
   Female     3       0       3
   ----------------------------
              5       0       5           

1860 slave schedule

R.M. Bales   14 slaves
35FB, 25FM, 25FM, 16FB, 12MM, 10FB, 8MB,
6FB, 4FB, 1MB, 1FB, 8MM, 6FM, 3FM

            Black  Mulatto
   Male       2       2       4
   Female     6       4      10
   ----------------------------
              8       6      14           

Catherine E. Ewing   10 slaves
35FM, 17FB, 15MM, 14FM, 12FM, 11MM, 8MM,
4FM, 3FM, 58MB

            Black  Mulatto
   Male       1       3       4
   Female     1       5       6
   ----------------------------
              2       8       9

Joshua Ewing   9 slaves
45FB, 30FM, 28MB, 26MB, 24FB, 16FB, 15MB,
8FB, 3FB

            Black  Mulatto
   Male       3       1       4
   Female     5       0       5
   ----------------------------
              8       1       9

Top  

21. Howard-Mark

John F. Howard and Elizabeth Mark

Table 21   John F. and Elizabeth (Mark) Howard family
Table Name Birth Death Age Born Died Buried Vocation
0 John F. (Flannery?) Howard 5 Nov 1802 25 Dec 1870 78 Lee Co VA Hagan, Lee Co VA Farmer
0 Elizabeth (Denny?) Mark 1812 1853 abt 41 Lee Co VA Lee Co VA Lee Co VA House keeper
1 Rebecca Ann (Baldwin) 31 Oct 1828 c1853/4 abt 25 Harlan Co Ky Lee Co VA Lee Co VA House keeper
2 Martha Jane (Hendrickson) 3 Jul 1831 3 Jun 1860 28 Harlan, Harlan Co KY Lee Co KY Lee Co KY House keeper
3 Samuel Martin Howard 1832 Harlan, Harlan Co KY Jackson, Newton Co AR Farmer
4 Margaret Anne (Baldwin) 1 Sep 1835 3 Jun 1912 76 Lee Co VA Moores Creek KY Wilson Cem Moores Creek KY House keeper
5 Mary Ann Howard 28 Jan 1839 19 Aug 1858 19 Lee Co VA Lee Co VA Lee Co VA
6 Hiram Jackson Howard 6 Mar 1840 26 Feb 1928 87 Lee Co VA Mosus, Harlan Co KY Ely-Morgan Cem, Rose Hill, Lee, VA Farmer
7 Sophiah Howard 1844 Lee Co VA
8 William James Howard 23 May 1845 Feb 1879 33 Hagen, Lee Co VA Hilltop, Newton Co AR
9 Elihu Archibald Burton Howard 9 Jun 1849 25 Nov 1927 78 Lee Co VA Brooks, Marion Co OR Aumsville, Oregon Farmer
Howard 1896
Howard 1896 Howard 1896
John N. Howard (1785–1842) and Samuel Howard (1762-1840)
Benefactors of Harlan Court House (Mt. Pleasant), Kentucky
Biographical Cyclopedia of the Commonweath of Kentucky
Embracing Biographies of Many of the
Prominent Men and Families of the States
Chicago-Philadelphia: John M. Gresham Company, 1896
Cropped from pdf file copped from Internet Archive
Howard 1896 Howard 1896

Tomb of Isaac L. Verton Howard and Elizabeth Morris
Spencer Cemetery, Stockport, Van Buren County, Iowa
Photograph by Teresa copped from Find a Grave

Photograph said to be of Isaac L.V. Howard
Attached to his Find a Grave memorial by
A Servant 4 Your Peace of Mind

Naming pleasantries

Harlan "war stories"

Harlan, the county seat of Harlan County, Kentucky, has gone through a number of name changes, and at times had multiple names. Stories about the people credited with founding the town and establishing it as the county seat in the 1819 are as numerous as the names.

1796  Samuel and Chloe Howard settle in area.
1819  Harlan County founded after Silas Harlan.
        "John N. Howard . . . donated to the county the ground
         upon which the first court house was built . . ."
         -- Biographical Cyclopedia of Kentucky, 1896, page 491
      Community already known as "Mount Pleasant".
1828  Post office established.
      PO called "Harlan Court House" because
        "Mt. Pleasant" POs already existed.
Civil War Confederate forces raid and occupy
        Harlan County seat at Harlan Post Office.
      Postmaster renames town "Spurlock" after himself.
1863  Pro-Confederates burn Harlan court house
        allegedly to avenge Union burning of
        court house in Lee County, Virginia.
1865  Renamed "Harlan"
1884  Formally incorporated as "Mount Pleasant".
      However, town already called "Harlan Court House"
        or "Harlan Town" by its inhabitants.
1912  Formally renamed "Harlan".

Variations

Elements of Harlan Court House founding stories, such as the origin of the land on which the first court house was built, or the origin of the name "Mt. Pleasant", considerably vary from story to story (below). See The burning of Harlan Court House (above) for variations of who burned the Harlan Court House during the Civil War.

Wikipedia, in its English article on Harlan, Kentucky, citing popular sources, describes the origins of the town of Harlan like this (viewed 20 January 2020).

Harlan was first settled by Samuel and Chloe Howard in 1796. Upon the founding of Harlan County (named for Kentucky pioneer Silas Harlan) in 1819, the Howards donated 12 acres (49,000 m2) of land to serve as the county seat.[Note 4] The community there was already known as "Mount Pleasant", apparently owing to a nearby Indian mound. [Note 5]

Brittain Merritt gave a very different account in "Samuel Howard Established Harlan / Settling Here In 1792 After War" in the 11 April 1930 edition of The Harlan Daily Enterprise (see image).

Harlan County came into being in 1819, and the next year 12 acres were sold to the County of Harlan, by Samuel [Howard] and cousin John N. Howard. Apparently they were eager to get a county seat established to expedite growth of the town that had been planned by the Howards, and named by them "Mt. Pleasant," because they said the spot was a "pleasant" one. Their eagerness was shown by only $5 being paid to the Howards for the tract, cheap even in those way-back yonder times.

Early in his long article, Merritt described John N. Howard as "second cousin".

[Samuel Howard] was joined [in the area Lincoln County that would become Harlan County] by a second cousin, John N. Howard, and his wife Susanah, and their family, soon after his arrival here [in the 1790s] . . . he got his cousin to come over from Virginia [Samuel Howard's and John N. Howard's native state] . . . .

Samuel Howard Click on image to enlarge
Sam Howard presented as a migrant from "Pennington Gap" in Lee Valley
Article from 27 February 1986 edition of Harlan's Heritage V from the diary of Ann Richards,
who supervised the Harlan County branch of the Pack Horse Library,
a late-depression (1936-1943) Works Progress Administration (WPA) project
Cop and crop of image posted by Alnman Marlowe on Ancestry.com
Samuel Howard Brittain Merritt's contribution to Samuel Howard's Harlan County legacy
Undated article from The Harlan Daily Enterprise, Harlan, Kentucky
Cop, crop, and touchup of image posted by Gen Highland
on the Baldwin Genealogy Facebook Group on 19 May 2019

Most of the above information is based on visual examinations of scans of census and other documents. Some of the information is conjectured from the examined documents. Discussions of the information, in view of variations on documents and in family trees, are shown below.

  1. John F. Howard's middle name appears to have been "Flannery" and he was known as "Jack" -- if some family trees can be believed. He may -- again, if some trees can be believed -- have been the oldest son of the John N. Howard [Hord] (1785–1842) and oldest brother of the Thomas F. [Flannery, Flanary] Howard (1811-1950) described in the entry for "Edward J. Howard" (1861-1935) in the Biographical Cyclopedia of the Commonwealth of Kentucky (see right).
  1. Howard-Flannary
    The John N. Howard of interest here was born in Virginia in 1785, resided in Harlan Kentucky during the early part of the 19th century, moved to Clark County Missouri around 1836, and died in Clark County in December 1842. The 1820, 1830, and 1840 censuses show a single (possibly the same) slave woman in his household (see breakdowns of household members above).
  2. If the 1896 article on Edward J. Howard in Biographical Cyclopedia of the Commonweath of Kentucky (right) is accurate -- the parents of this John N. Howard were Samuel [Hord, Hoard] Howard (1762–1840) and Chloe Osborne (1762-1840). Note, however, that a 1930 Harlan newspaper article on Samuel Howard's life claims that Samuel Howard and John N. Howard were second cousins (see right).
  3. Samuel and Chloe are said to have married in Kentucky in 1784 -- presumably meaning Kentucky County (a state from 1792), the western part of the Commonwealth of Virginia (a state from 1788). Samuel was born on 2 July 1762 in Buckingham County, Virginia. He died on 5 December 1840 in Dayhoit in Harlan County, Kentucky, and was buried in Wix Howard Cemetery at Loyall in Harlan County. Due to erosion at Wix Howard Cemetery, Samuel's grave, and the graves of his wife Chloe (Osborne) Howard and a "Baby Howard", were reportedly moved to Resthaven Cemetery at Baxter in Harlan County, on or about 12 May 2017, the date of the reinternment ceremony. His Find a Grave memorial has a transcription of a long speech about his life presented at the ceremony. Chloe's Find a Grave memorial states that "Chloe Langley Osborne was the daughter of Ephraim Osborne I and Elizabeth Wells Howard. Chloe married Samuel Howard II in 1784 in Buckingham, Virginia. Chloe and Samuel had 15 children: Andrew, Martha May, Andrew Benjamin, John N., Benjamin Andrew, Adron, Mary W., Sarah, Samuuel III, Wilkerson Asher, Nancy, Dryden, Elizabeth and Hiram."
  4. If this John N. Howard was John F. Howard's father, then his mother was Susannah Flanary (1785–1848).
    1. Susannah Flanary is usually said to have been born in 1785 in Wilkes, North Carolina, but died in December 1848 in Harlan, Kentucky. This implies that, if she accompanied John N. Howard to Missouri in 1836, she returned to Harlan after his death in 1840. She and John N. Howard are supposed to have married in 1800 in Scott County, Virginia -- though Scott County was not formed until 1814.
      1. Scott County was formed from parts of Lee, Washington, and Russell counties, immediately to the east of what remained of Lee County. Wilkes County is in the northwest corner of North Carolina close to North Carolina's borders with Virginia counties directly east of Lee and Scott counties. The drive today from Wilkesboro in Wilkes county to Jonesville in Lee County is roughly 150 miles or about 3 hours, The route passes through Gate City, the seat of Scott County.
    2. Susannah's father was John Flanary (1748–1842), born in Wilkes, North Carolina, died in Lee County, Virginia. Her mother was Phoebe Boggs (1754–1842), born in Surry County, North Carolina, died in Lee County, Virginia. Surry County shares its southwest border with Wilkes and its northern border with Virginia counties east of Scott County.
  5. Moreover, if John F. Howard's parents were John H. Howard and Susannah Flanary, then Isaac L. Verton Howard (1818-1909) was JF's brother and hence an uncle to JF's daughters Rebecca and Margaret Howard. See tomb and photograph to right.
    1. Isaac L. Verton Howard is said to have been born on 10 March 1818 in Turkey Cove in Lee County, Virginia. He reportedly died on 28 November 1909 in Cedar City, Van Buren County, Iowa. Elizabeth Betsy Morris is said to have been born in Harlan County, Kentucky on 11 November 1817 and died in Van Buren County in Iowa on 7 April 1907.
    2. A Harlan County, Kentucky marriage register shows that "Isaac L.V. Howard" married "Elizabeth Howard" on 5 September 1836 by T.W. Chandler (?). The 1850 census for District 19 of Clark County, Missouri, shows Isaac born in Virgina and Elizabeth born in Kentucky.
    3. The 1st page of a hand-written letter attributed to Isaac Howard states that the family left Kentucky for Iowa "about the first of April 1838". The person who shared an image of the 1st page characterized the trip as "through the Cumberland Gap" -- which would be odd if they set out from Kentucky for either Missouri to the west of Kentucky or Iowa to the north of Missouri.
  1. Elizabeth Mark's identity is also tentative. Some family trees show her as "Elizabeth Denny Mark". She appears to have been a daughter of Samuel Mark (1765–1845) and Sarah "Sally" Catherine Benjey (1783–1847). Elizabeth Mark and John F. Howard presumably married no later than 1828, as their 1st child, Rebecca Ann Howard, was born on 31 October 1828.
  1. An indent1ure made on 11 September 1847, after the death of Elizabeth's mother Sarah Mark in 1847, widowed by the death of her father Samuel Mark in 1845, showed that she was a daughter of Samuel Mark. His children, and their spouses, were as follows.
    1. Children of Samuel and Sarah Mark
      Samuel's 2nd family
      Samuel Mark (1765-1845) Senior, I
      Born c1865 Ireland
      Died 18 August 1845 Lee County Virginia
      1st wife
      Elizabeth Denny (1767–1809)
      Born 1767 Philadelphia Pennsylvania
      Died 26 Oct 1809 Jonesville Lee County Virginia
      2nd wife
      Sarah Catherine "Sally" Benjey (1788-1847)
      Born c1788 Lee County Virginia
      Died 20 November 1847 Johnson County Missouri
      Sam and Sarah married nlt 1812
    2. Children of Sam Mark and Elizabeth Denny
    3. Samuel Mark (1792–1874) Junior, II
        Born 1792 Philadelphia Pennsylvania
        Died 5 Dec 1874 Aurora Marion Co OR
      Alexander Kesterson Mark (1792–1845)
      John Mark (1795–1874)
        Born 20 Jun 1795 Maryland
        Died 5 Dec 1874 Clackamas Co Oregon
        Married Fanny Forester (1797-1859)
          Born 1797 Kentucky
          Died 1859 Oregon
        Moved 1838 from Kentucky to Missouri
        Moved 1847 from Missouri to Oregon
        Parents, 6 children, 1 son-in-law
      Jane Mark (1796–1871)
      Patricia Martha "Patsy" Mark (1799–1880)
      Mary Margaret (Peggy) Mark (1802–1881)
      Martha Mark (1805–1860)
    4. Children of Sam Mark and Sarah Benjey
    5. Elizabeth "Betsy" Mark -- John F. Howard
      Elizabeth Denny Mark (1812-1853)
      Born c1812 Lee Co. VA
      Died c1853 Cumbow Lee Co
      John Flannery "Jack" Howard (1802-1870)
      Born 5 Nov 1802 Lee Co VA
      Died 25 Dec 1870 Hagen Lee Co
      Married nlt 1828
      Parents of Rebecca and Margaret (Howard) Baldwin
      John R. Baldwin's 1st and 2nd wives
      John F. Howard is older brother of Elihue K. Howard
      husband of Elizabeth's younger sister Sophia
    6. William Mark -- Mary
      William E.N. (Ewing Neal) Mark
      Born c1813 Knox Kentucky
      Died about Mar 1873
      Married Mary Ann Harper 4 Oct 1839 Lee Co VA
    7. Sophia Mark -- Elihue Howard
      Sophia Catharine Mark
      Born 1823 Harlan Co KY
      Died 27 May 1885 Oregon
      Elihue K. Howard (1814-1885)
      Born 20 Mar 1814 Lee Co VA
      Died 27 May 1885 Oregon
      Elihue K. Howard was younger brother of John F. Howard
      husband of Sophia's older sister Elizabeth
      thus an uncle of Rebecca and Margaret (Howard) Baldwin
      and an uncle-in-law to John R. Baldwin
    8. Sally Mark -- Russel Bales
      Sarah Catherine "Sally" Mark (1826-1862)
      Born 8 Feb 1826 Harlan Harlan Co KY
      Died 11 Nov 1862 Gray Hawk Jackson Co KY
      John "Russell" Bales (1823-1894)
      Son of Vincent L. Bales and Joanna Breeding
      Born 1 Dec 1823 Lee Co VA
      Died 3 Jun 1894 Van Buren Co IA
      Married nlt 1844
    9. Nancy Mark -- William M. Taylor
      Nancy Mark (1826-
      Born 20 Jul 1828 Harlan Harlan Co KY
      Died c1873
      William Moses Taylor (1816-1870)
      Born 2 Nov 1816 Scott Co VA
      Died 10 Feb 1870 White Shoals Lee Co
      Married 18 Jan 1844
      William M. Taylor's daughter Martha Jane Taylor
      married John F. Howard's son Hiram J. Howard
  2. An article about John Mark's Harlan-born son Samuel Forrester Mark (1833-1903) states that one of his father's siblings died in infancy.
  3. "Alexander K., Mary A., Elizabeth D., Levina, Samuel Forester and Eliza Jane" made the trip to Oregon -- Mary A. with her husband Jacob Adams" (An Illustrated History of the State of Oregon by Rev. H. K. Hind, D. D., Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Company, 1893, pages 951-952).
  1. Rebecca Howard is "Rebecca Ann" in her younger sister Margaret Baldwin's 1911 widow's pension declaration following John R. Baldwin's death. See John R. Baldwin in the Mexican War of 1846-1848 (below) for details. A number of family trees show "Rachel Rebecca Howard but the foundation for "Rachel" is not clear. I conjecture her to be the oldest daughter enumerated in John F. Howard's household on the 1840 census as the sole female tallied in the 10-14 age group. See Chronology of Howard-Mark family (below) for details.
  2. Martha Jane Howard (1831-1860) married James Finley Fulkerson (1822-1914) on 22 December 1851 in Lee County, Virginia. They had 4 children, 2 of whom died in infancy, before Martha died at age 29, apparently at her widowed father's home. The 1860 census enumerates her in her father's household posthumously (see below).
  3. "Samuel M. Howard" was married to "Lucy Noe" on 2 August 1863 by "Nathan Noe M.B. [Missionary Baptist] Church" at the home of "Randolph Noe" in the witness of "Jacob Brock" and "John Noe". Lucy R. Noe appears to have been born in Harlan County in July 1844.
    1. The 1870 census shows Samuel M. and Lucy living with Samuel's widowed father John F. Howard in White Shoals Township in the Jonesville Post Office area of Lee County, Virginia, with no children. They appear to have lost a daughter born in 1863 shortly after their marriage.
    2. The 1880 census shows "Samuel Howard" (49) and "Lucy" (36) farming and keeping house in Jackson Township in Newton County, Arkansas, with 3 children -- "John" (8), "Margret" [sic] (5), and "Jane" (4). Samuel was born in Kentucky to a North Carolina-born father and Kentucky-born mother. Lucy was born in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents. John Randolph Howard (c1872-1925) was born in Lee County, Virginia, and Margaret Sophie Howard (1874–1939) and Jane Howard (b1876) were born in Iowa. Another child, Marion Alexander Howard, was born in Boone County, Arkansas, on 15 February 1881.
  4. Margaret Anne Howard married John R. Baldwin in Harlan on 13 June 1855. See 10. Baldwin-Howard; John R. Baldwin and Rebecca and Margaret Howard for details.
  5. Mary Ann Howard is found on the 1840 census as a female between 0-4 years old, and on the 1850 census as "Mary A." (12). She either died before the 1860 census or married and so would be found somewhere under a different name.
  6. Hiram Jackson Howard married Martha Jane Taylor on 5 August 1860. He appears to have gone to Owsley County with John R. Baldwin during the civil war. See 21.3 Howard-Taylor: Hiram J. Howard and Jane Taylor family (below) for details.
  7. Sophiah Howard is known only on the 1850 census (see below for details).
  8. William James Howard -- is enumerated as "James W. Howard" (23) in the household of his brother-and-law and sister "John R. Baldwin" and "Margaret" (35), residing in Sturgeon Precinct No. 6 in Jackson County, Kentucky. He drops off census records after this. Many family trees claim that he died on 2 February 1879 in Arkansas -- some in Newton County, others in Faulkner County. Several specify "Hilltop" in Newton County, though I cannot confirm such a locality there. If he died in Arkansas, he may have been there in connection with his brother Samuel, who is found in the 1880 census for Jackson in Newton County.
    1. Many family trees claim William married "Disey Matilda Taylor" (1857–1924) on 2 April 1871 in Rose Hill in Fairfax County, Virginia, and that they had three children. But the place-of-birth and other particulars make no sense.
    2. Some family trees associate a photograph of a William James Howard in Civil War records with the Mark-Howard family (see below). As of this writing (2020), I cannot confirm this.
  9. Elihu Archibald Howard is "Elihugh A.B. Howard" on an Oregon State Board of Health Certificate of Death issued for his death in Brooks Township, Marion County, Oregon, on 25 November 1927, of Cardio Vascular Renal Disease. Samuel had been a farmer, and his deceased wife's name was "Winnie Howard". He was born on 9 June 1849 in Lee County, Virginia, according to the certificate, which says his father's name was John Baldwin -- place of birth blank -- and his mother's maiden name and place of birth are blank -- as informed by his son "W.A. Howard" of Aumsville, Oregon, where Elihu was scheduled to be buried on 27 November 1927.
    1. Eihugh and Winnie married on 6 December 1866 in Lee County, Virginia.
    2. The 1870 census for Subdivision 93 of the Barbourville Post Office area of Knox County, Kentucky, shows "E. A. B. Howard" (21) and "Winnie A." (22), with two sons, "James W." (3) and "William A." (2).
    3. The 1880 census shows the Howards still in Barbourville with 4 more children.
    4. The 1900 census for Yoakum Precinct in Umatilla County, Oregon, shows "E.A.B. Howard" (49), born June 1850, and "Winnie Howard" (51), born July 1848, residing with their son "James W. Howard" (32), Sept 1867, his wife "Cora B." (22), Nov 1877, their 3 children, "Charley A." (8), "Lena G." (1), and "Baby" (0/12), and 2 of John A.'s brothers, "Johnny Howard" (27) and "Ulisis D. Howard" (23). John A. and Cora B. have been married 8 years and all 3 of her children survive. E.A.B. and Winnie have been married 37 years and all 8 of her children are still living. E.A.B. Howard was born in Virginia to a Kentucky-born father and Virginia-born mother. Winnie was born in Kentucky to a Virginia-born father and Kentucky-born mother. All three of their sons were born in Kentucky. Cora B. was born in Arkansas to Illinois-born parents. Her children with John A. were born in Oregon -- Charley A. in Apr 1892, which means they had moved to Oregon by then.
      1. The "Jun 1850" birthdate for E.A.B. Howard should be "Jun 1849".
        He first appears on the 1850 census for Lee County, Virginia, as "Eihugh" (1).
    5. 15 April 1908   Winefred A. Dozier, born in Barbourville in Knox County, Kentucky, on 11 July 1848, died on 15 April 1908 in Logan in Clackamas County, Oregon. She is buried as "Winnie A. Howard" in Logan Pleasant View Cemetery in Logan.
    6. The 1910 census for Brooks Precinct in Marion County, Oregon, shows "E. A. B. Howard" (60) widowed, with his son "John" (38) single, a grandson "George A." (7), and a boarder, "Irvin Geer" (25). E.A.B. is a farmer on a general farm, while John and Irvin are farm laborers working out. E.A.B. was born in Virginia to Kentucky-born parents. The grandson was born in Oregon.
    7. The 1920 census for Brooks Pricinct, Marion County, Oregon, shows "Elihu A. B. Howard" (70), widowed, a shoemaker in his own shop, with a single son, "John S." (47), a laborer on a general farm. A.B. Howard was born in Virginia to Kentucky-born parents, and John S. was born in Kentucky to a Virginia-born father and Kentucky-born mother.
    8. Elihu Archibald Burton Howard, born on 9 June 1849 in Lee County, Virginia, died on 27 November 1927 in Brooks in Marion County, Oregon. He is buried in Aumsville Cemetery in Aumsville in Marion County.
    9. William Archibald Howard, Elihu A.B. Howard's son, born on 26 February 1869 in Barbourville in Knox County, Kentucky, died on 18 November 1944 in Aumsville in Marion County, Oregon. He, too, is buried in Aumsville Cemetery.

Top  

Chronology of Howard-Mark family

The Howard-Mark family, as described here, originates in both Harlan County, Kentucky, and Lee County, Virginia. Most Howard-Mark children were born and raised in Lee County, and most would marry Lee County neighbors and raise their own families in Lee County. Some later settled in Harlan or elsewhere in Kentucky.

Howard-Mark family in 1800 to 1860 censuses
1800 1810 1820 1830 1840 1850 1860 1870
Howard
John Flannery
Born 1802 Married nlt 1828

Rebecca born in
Kentucky according to
1850 Virginia census
Martha and Samuel
born in Harlan Ky

Margaret and Mary
born in Lee County Va
Lee County Va District 31
Lee County Va

Elizabeth died 1853
Jonesville
Post Office
Lee County Va
Died 1870
Mark
Elizabeth
Born 1812
Howard deed 11 September 1847 indent1ure between the heirs of Samuel Mark [and his 2nd wife Sarah Benjey]
pursuant to 11 September 1846 Lee County Chancery Court decree in James Cox vs. Samuel Mark

Cop and crop of image posted by Gen Highland on Facebook Baldwin Genealogy Group

The cited "Deed Book" is associated with "Land Records" under the "Lee County" section of microfilmed records at the Library of Virginia. The above summary raises many questions, but on the surface appears to refer to a matter appears to an 1887 matter involving 1846 and 1847 matters -- i.e., an equity bill raised in chancery court in 1887 that required the review of injunctures and decrees associated with the inheritance of the estate of Samuel Mark by his children, grandchildren, and great granchildren.

The documents associated with the above summary of a Lee County court record appear to include a deed which shows the names of Samuel Mark's 5 children with his 2nd wife and their spouses (see left for details). The deed appears to establish that Samuel Mark's great grandchildren included the children John R. Baldwin fathered with Rececca Howard, the daughter of Samuel Mark's daughter Elizabeth Mark with John F. Howard, who was thus their grandfather and John R. Baldwin's father-in-law. Samuel appears to have passed away in 1845 and left his property to Sarah, who seems to have died in 1847. James Cox may have sued Samuel Mark over an unpaid dept and this matter was resolved posthumously in 1846. Sarah Mark seems to have passed away in 1847, and her children -- as Mark-Benjey successors -- appear to have entered into an agreement childrenAand Samuel Mark that arose after Samuel's death, which had to be taken into account by his children, who presumably became his successors following Sarah's death.

Samuel Mark's son-in-law, John F. Howard, owned several tracts of land in Lee County, and also owed money to several people, who sued him for paymente his successors . property involving James Cox, which of Samuel Mark's great grandchildren.

The documents were exhibits in a 10 September 1887 matter between the children of John R. Baldwin and Rebecca -- presumably Elizabeth Letilia (Baldwin) Taylor, John Milton Baldwin, and Mary Ellen (Baldwin) Lewis -- and Hiram J. Howard, their uncle, a younger brother of their mother Rebecca Howard, children of John F. Howard.

William James Howard

Photograph alleged to be of
William James Howard
in CAS uniform during Civil War

Image copped and cropped from
Ancestry.com
as posted by HensleySpilkerTree2018
who attributes it to
"Military photo, from U.S. gov't archives,
acquired by Ted Murphy"

As of this writing (2021),
I am unable to confirm
the provenance or identity
of this photo

William James Howard
Elihugh Howard Elihugh A.B. Howard's Oregon death certificate
The informant was his son William A. Howard
Image copped from Ancestry.com
as posted by carolynfisher1, who attributes it to
Clackamas County Family History Society
William Howard William Archie Howard's Oregon death certificate
The informant was his wife Rosella Maude
Image copped and resized from Ancestry.com
as posted by carolynfisher1, who attributes it to
Clackamas County Family History Society

Entangled families

The 1850s witnessed the decimation of the Baldwin-Seale nuclear family, from 11 in 1850 to 5 in 1860. John Milton, Elizabeth, and 4 of their 9 children -- 3 of 5 sons and 1 of 4 daughters -- died. John R. Baldwin, the oldest of 2 surviving sons, took in his orphaned younger brother Thomas. Mary, the oldest daughter, had married and The oldest daughter had married but lost her husband The neighboring Grubb family died, Baldwin parents were gone, older childrenchildren of age to marry married, and Today, with smaller families and lower mortality rates, and

The 1830 census for Harlan County, Kentucky, shows a "John F. Howard" household immediately after a "John Mark" household. The compositions of the two households are as follows. The conjectured names and ages, keyed to 1850 censuses (below), are mine.

John Mark
      Male  Female  Totals  Conjectured names and ages   
 0-4            2      2    Lavina H. "Vinnie" (Mark)
                              [spouse] (1830–1912)
                              Born 13 May 1830 Harlan
                              Died 1912 Salem Oregon
                            Elizabeth Denny (Mark)
                              Adams (1827–1911)
                              Birth 10 Nov 1827 Harlan
                              Died  3 Nov 1911 Dayton, Columbia Co, Washington     
 5-9     1      1      2    Alexander Kesterson "John" Mark (b1922)
                            Mary Ann (Mark) Adams (1820–1888)
                              Born 10 Aug 1820 Johnson, Missouri, USA
                              Died 9 Nov 1888 Goldendale
                              Klickitat Co, Washington
30-39    1      1      2    John Mark (1795–1874)
                            Martha Frances "Fannie"
                              (Forrester) Mark (1797–1859)
---------------------------
Totals   2      4      6
John F. Howard
      Male  Female  Totals  Conjectured names and ages   
  0-4           2      2    Rebecca (2), ? (?)
15-19    1             1    Relative (?)
20-29    1      1      2    John (28), Elizabeth (18)
---------------------------
Totals   2      3      5
Composition of John Mark's Mark-Forrester family

John Mark and Martha Franes "Fanny" Forrester had the 7 children, 1 of whom died in infancy.

John Mark's parents
Samuel Mark (1765–1845)
  Born c1765 Lee Co Virginia
  Died 18 Aug 1845 Lee Co VA
Elizabeth (Denny) Mark (1767–1809)
  Born 1767 Philadelphia, Delaware Co Pennsylvania
  Died 26 Oct 1809 Jonesville, Harlan, Virginia

John Mark and Frances Forrester
John Mark (1795–1874)
  Born 11 Jan 1795 Philadelphia Pennsylvania
  Died  5 Dec 1874 Aurora Marion Co Oregon
Martha Frances "Fannie" (Forrester) Mark (1797–1859)
  Born 21 Jun 1797 North Carolina
  Died  5 Nov 1859 Aurora Marion Co Oregon
  Married 14 Jul 1818 Harlan
Mark-Forrester children
Mary Ann (Mark) Adams (1820–1888)
  Born 10 Aug 1820 Johnson Missouri
  Died 9 Nov 1888 Goldendale Klickitat Co Washington
  Married Jacob Adams 16 May 1839 Johnson Missouri
  Born 9 Oct 1817 Wilkes Co North Carolina
  Died 28 Mar 1879  Goldendale Klickitat Co WA
Alexander Kesterson "John" Mark (b1922)
  Born 28 Dec 1822 Harlan Harlan Co KY
  Died 19 Jul 1895 McMinnville Yamhill Co Oregon
Elizabeth Denny (Mark) Adams (1827–1911)
  Birth 10 Nov 1827 Harlan KY
  Died   3 Nov 1911 Dayton, Columbia Co, Washington
  Married Andrew Jackson Adams
  Born 24 Sep 1824 Wilkes County North Carolina
  Died 18 Oct 1881
  Buried Santa Rosa Rural Cemetery CA    
Lavina H. "Vinnie" (Mark) (1830–1912)
  Born 13 May 1830 Harlan
  Died 1912 Salem Oregon
  Married [?]
Samuel Forrester "Sam" Mark (1833–1903)
  Born 15 Aug 1833 Harlan Harlan Co KY
  Died 13 Nov 1903 Aurora Marion Co OR
  Married Mary Ann Abbott (1841–1916)
  Born 22 Jan 1841 Illinois
  Died 27 Aug 1916 Barlow Clackamas Co Oregon
Eliza Jane (Mark) Peebles (1836–1914)
  Born  5 Jun 1836 Harlan Harlan Co KY
  Died 28 Dec 1914 Salem Marion Co OR

The 1840 census for Lee County, Virginia, shows "John Howard" as the head of a household consisting of 8 members including himself -- all "Free White Persons" of the following ages by sex. The conjectured names and ages, keyed to the 1850 census (below), are mine.

      Male  Female  Totals  Conjectured names and ages   
  0-4    1     2       3    Hiram (0), Mary (2), Margaret (4)
  5-9    1     1       2    Samuel (8), Martha (9)
10-14          1       1    Rebecca (12)
15-19
20-29          1       1    Elizabeth (28)
30-39    1                  John (38)
---------------------------
Totals   3      5      8
1 person engaged in agriculture.
1 person over 20 could not read or write.

The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County, Virginia, shows "John F. Howard", 48, farming with his wife "Elizabeth", 38, and 8 children -- "Martha J." 19, "Samuel" 18, "Margaret" 14, "Mary A." 12, "Hiram" 10, "Sophiah" 6, "William" 4, and "Eihugh" 1. Samuel, too, is farming.

  1. All members of the household were born in Virginia except Martha, who was born in Kentucky, suggesting that the family -- or at least Elizabeth -- was in Kentucky around 1831 when Martha was born.
  2. All conjectured members of the 1840 census for the Howard-Mark family (above) are enumerated in this 1850 census, except Rebecca, who is listed in the same census for Lee County as "Rebecca", 22, wife of "John R. Baldwin", 22, with 1 child, "Elizabeth" (1), whose namesake is Rebecca's mother.

The 1860 census for the Jonesville Post Office area of the Western District of Lee County enumerates "John F. Howard", age 56, as a "Meth. Clergyman" residing on an estate valued at $8,000. He is the head of a household consisting of 5 other members -- "Samuel" 29 and "Hyram" [sic] 20, both farm laborers, and "Wm." 14, "Martha Hendrickson" 29, "Martha J. Taylor" 18, and "Clementine Taylor" 2. Samuel, Hiram, and William are John's son's. The census is enumerated on 6 July as of 1 June statuses.

  1. A marriage record shows that Hiram J. Howard married a "Martha J. Taylor" on 4 August 1860 -- 2 months after the census. The record names Hiram's parents as "Jno F. Howard" and "E. Howard" and Martha's parents as "Wm. Taylor" and "Jane Taylor".
    1. Martha J. Taylor would appear to be Hiram's future wife.
    2. Clementine Taylor, if not Martha J. Taylor's daughter, could be a younger sister.
      If her daughter, who is Clementine's father?
  2. Martha Hendrickson would appear to be John F. Howard's daughter Martha J. Howard married to, separated from, or widowed by a man named Hendrickson.
  3. The plot thickens
  4. All members of the household are stated as having been born in Lee County, Virginia, except Samuel, and Martha Hendrickson and Martha J. Taylor, who were born in "Harlin" [sic], Kentucky, according to this census. The 1860 census stated that Martha J. Howard (Hendrickson) was born in Kentucky but Samuel was born in Virginia.
  5. The woman listed in the 1860 census of the household of John N. Howard as "Martha Hendrickson" (29), born in Harlan County, Kentucky, is "Martha Fulkerson" -- John N. Howard's daughter Martha Jane Howard. A transcription of a Virginia death record states that a "Martha Fulkerson", born in "Harland" [sic] County, Kentucky, died on "3 Jun 1860" in Lee County, Virginia, at age 28. Her father was "Jno Howard" and her mother was "Eliza Howard", and she had been a housekeeper married to "James F. Fulkerson". Another transcription of the record says she died on "3 Jan 1859". Her father's household was enumerated on 6 July 1860 -- 1 month and 3 days after Martha's death. But the datum for the census was 1 June 1860 -- 2 days before her death -- hence her posthumous inclusion in her father's household. Martha appears to have returned to her widowed father's home because of illness.
  6. Enter Elihue K. Howard
  7. The 1860 census for the same Jonesville Post Office area enumerates Martha J. Fulkerson's children -- "Harriet Fulkerson" (7) and "Archelas Fulkerson" (4) -- in the household of Martha's uncle "Elihue K. Howard" (45) and his wife "Sophia C." (36), and their son "Elihue" (10). Everyone was born in Lee County, Virginia, except Sophia, who was born in Harlan County, Kentucky.
    1. Harriet Elizabeth Fulkerson (b1852) was born on 7 November 1852 in Lee County, Virginia, and died in Alvarado in Johnson County, Texas. She married George W. Cloud on 24 November 1868 in Lee County. A partial transciption of a marriage record gives "Harriet F. Fulkerson" as a child of "Martha Fulkerson" whose spouse is "Jas. F." (Ancestry.com).
    2. Harriet's brother, Archelaus Hughes Fulkerson (1856–1943), was born on 28 October 1856 in Cumberland Gap [sic], Lee County, Virginia [according to some family trees], and died on 1 March 1943 in Muldoon, Fayette County, Texas. A scanned Texas death certificate states that "Archer Hugh Fulkerson" died in Muldoon, Fayette County on 1 March 1943, and that he was born on 28 October 1856 in Virginia to Virginia-born father "James Fulkerson" and Virginia-born mother "-- Howard".
    3. Harriet and Archelaus apparently lost two infant siblings -- John Whitehill Fulkerson (1854–1854) and "Francetta Margaretta Fulkerson (1858–1859). And they seem to have had several half-siblings born to their widowed father's second wife. I would guess that Martha's health problems, and the loss of 2 infant children, were related.
  8. The 1850 census for District 31 of Lee County, Virginia, shows "Elihugh K. Howard" (36) and "Sophiah" (28) without any children. He was born in Virginia, she in Kentucky.
  9. The 1870 census shows "E. K. Howard" (56) farming in Barbourville Post Office area of Subdivision 93 of Knox County, Kentucky, with his wife "Sophia" (48), keeping house, and "Mary M." (10), apparently their daughter.
  10. The 1880 census for Enumeration District 51 of the Barbourville Magisterial District of Knox County, Kentucky, shows "Elihu K. Howard" (66) and "Sophia C." (58) farming and keeping house alone. Some family trees state that Elihue K. Howard (1814-1885) was born in Lee County on 20 March 1814 and died in Oregon on 27 May 1885. A Find a Grave memorial shows a "Rev E K Howard" with these dates buried in Rock Creek Cemetery in Canby in Clackamas County, Oregon. Whether this is the "E. K. Howard" of the Virginia-Kentucky Howard-Flannery family is not clear.
  11. Elihue K. Howard (1814-1885) was an older brother of John F. Howard. His wife, Sophia Catherine Mark (1823-1885), was a younger sister of John F. Howard's wife Eilizabeth Denny Mark, who Samuel appears to have named after his 1st wife Elizabeth Denny (appears to have named after was a daughter of Samuel and Sarah Mark

The 1870 census for White Shoals Township in the Jonesville Post Office area of Lee Valley, Virginia, shows "John F. Howard" 67, a farmer, with "Samuel M. [Martin]" 38, a farm laborer, and "Lucy", 34, keeping house. John was born in Lee County, Samuel and Lucy in Harlan County, Kentucky. The "Cannot read" and "Cannot write" boxes are checked for all 3 members. All boxes are unchecked except the "Cannot write" box for Lucy. Records show that "Samuel M. Howard" married "Lucy R. Noe" in Harlan County, Kentucky, on 2 August 1863.

Hiram Jackson Howard was born on 6 March 1840 in Lee County, Virginia. He died on 26 February 1928 in Harlan, in Harlan County, Kentucky.

Margaret's mother, Elizabeth (Mark) Howard, was born in Lee County in 1812. She died on 17 March 1853 (some trees say 1855) in Cumbow, Lee, Virginia. Cumbow is near Jonesville.

Top  

Creditors vs. John F. Howard

John M. Beaty vs. John F. Howard, 1857
John R. Baldwin's father-in-law faces lawsuits over debts
Judgments order him to pay the debts and suit costs

The following images are cropped from image files relating to equity case indexed as 1857-001, 1859-007, and 1867-005 in the Chancery Records Index of the Library of Virginia and Virginia Memory Digital Collections (search under Lee County for Defendant "Howard").

The years in the index numbers signify the years that the matters raised by the complaints were resolved and the cases were closed. The on-line files contain scans of documents associated with the cases. The scans can be viewed through the Virginia Memory, Chancery Records Index portal. They can also be downloaded in zip files which somewhat inconveniently contain separate rather than bundled pdf files -- and pdf rather than jpg files. However, each of the zipped files can be opened at will in any recent version of Adobe Reader. All images shown here are those I clipped as jpg files from the received pdf files.

Creditors vs. John F. Howard

1850s and 1860s Chancery Court proceedings

Tracts of land including Poors Valley in Lee County

Two cases raised in the Chancery Court of Lee County -- indexed as case Index 1867-005 and 1867 007 -- concern actions taken by creditors against John F. Howard (1802-1870), John R. Baldwin's father in law. In both cases, the creditors petition the court to oblige Howard to sell several tracts of land in order to pay off debts which exceed the value of his personal (non-real) estate.

By the time these cases 1905-043 concerns an "equity bill" brought to the Chancery Court of Lee County Virginia in 1903. The complaint was resolved in 1904 and the case was closed in 1905.

  1. 1857-001
    John M. Beaty v. John F. Howard
    Debt, 6 pages
  2. 1859-007
    John M. Beaty v. John F. Howard
    Debt, Property, 18 pages
  3. 1867-005
    Ransom & Russell for etc. vs. John F. Howard
    Debt, Property, 8 pages

Top  


1857-001

John M. Beaty vs. John F. Howard

Bill in Chancery
Index 1857-001
Debt

John M. Beaty vs. John F. Howard

A May 1856 judgment obliged John F. Howard to pay a debt of $498.00 "with legal interest thereon from the 18th day of October 1854 till paid, and the costs of the suit".

In April 1857 or possibly later, after Howard's 16 March 1857 court appearance in response to a summons, the plaintiffs filed a complaint pointing out limitations of the sheriff's authority to publicly auction a debtor's assets in order to accommodate a payment schedule.

A Chancery Court record for the November 1857 session states that on 16 March 1857, the defendant John F. Howard "appeared [in court] in obedience to a summons" and presented a schedule of all his assets, "consisting of some personal property and sundry tracts of land".

Howard was ordered to surrender to the sheriff sufficient personal property to be sold [in a public auction] "at the front door of the Court House of this County" sufficient to cover the debt.

Should Howard's personal property be insufficient, then "he is to proceed to sell the tract of 143 acres and last the tract of 150 acres . . . and apply the proceeds of such sales of personal property & land to the discharge of the said judgment and costs".

Click on images to enlarge
2-page complaint filed no earlier than April 1857
referring to debts incurred no later than October 1854
(Files 105_1857_001-0002.pdf and 105_1857_001-0003.pdf)

Click on images to enlarge
2-page court decree issued during November 1857
referring to 16 March 1857 appearance et cetera
(Files 105_1857_001-0005.pdf and 105_1857_001-0006.pdf)

Howard 1857-001 Howard 1857-001 Howard 1857-001 Howard 1857-001

Top  


Howard 1859-007 Howard 1859-007

Click on images to enlarge

Above
Court summons issued 28 February 1857
to appear in court on 1st Monday of March

(file 105_1859_007-0017.pdf)

Right
Howard's affidavit of assets
sworn before court commissioner
on 16 March 1857

(file 105_1859_007-0014.pdf)

1859-007

John M. Beaty vs. John F. Howard

Bill in Chancery
Index 1859-007
Debt, property

John M. Beaty vs. John F. Howard

"His property consists almost wholly, as appears from said schedule [of his estate], of six tracts of land, upon one of which it appears he resides. This last mentioned tract, containing 150 acres, is the only one that can be regarded as at all valuable, the others being merely appendages thereto & valuable mainly on account of the timber they afford; they are all situated in this county, and therefore, under the rather curious provisions of the law, were not conveyed by said Howard to the Sheriff for the purpose of sale". The orator (representative for the plaintiff) further states that "much of the cleared land on the said tract of 150 acres is poor and worn" and would not be sufficient to cover the outstanding debt of $498.00 plus interest and costs, of which the plaintiff has received nothing.

John F. Howard replies that it is not true that other tracts are not valuable. He cites some figures and also alludes to another settlement matter involving Joseph N. Bundy, and William Cox as agent for Howard, involving the sale of horses and other dealings.

Notwithstanding Howard's excuses, on 24 November 1859, the court issused a decree, in which it appointed John C. Johnston as a commissioner, and ordered him "to sell at public sale, to the highest bidder for ready money at the front door of the court house of this county, on the first day of [unread] court, as much of the lands belonging to the Defendant . . . as may be sufficient to pay the said Judgment and costs . . .". The commissioner was to first sell as many of the "out tracts" as may be sufficient, and to sell "the home tract, whereon the Defendant resides, in the event that the other tracts aforesaid shall not produce a sufficient amount to discharge the said Judgement . . ."

List of tracts of land owned by John H. Howard, declared on 16 March 1857. All the tracts are in Lee County.

  1. 150 acres -- "tract of land . . . I live on"
  2. 143 acres -- "lies south of where I live bought from Fisher & Jas. Crabtree
  3. 308 acres -- "lies in the Poor Valley"
  4. 375 acres -- "lies in the Stone Mountain"
  5.  75 acres -- "lies in the Poor Valley"
  6.  57 acres -- "lies on the South side of Poor Valley Ridge"

Poor Valley

Poor Valley figures in a number of records related to John F. Howard's son-in-law John R. Baldwin, who appears to have lived on a tract of land in Poor Valley, possibly owned by his father-in-law. See Poor Valley (below) for a description of the valley.

Top  


Lee County Chancery Court 1867-005

Ransom & Russel for Russel vs. John F. Howard

The image to the right shows how the court clerk recorded continuance actions in the case of Ransom & Russel for Russel vs. John F. Howard identified as "1867-005".

Documents, including deeds, were folded once or twice for filing purposes. The name of the case or matter was written on the back of one of the folds. Below the name could be written all manner of actions and dates -- including kinds and amounts of fees and when and by whom they were paid, as shown on some of the N.B. Baldwin deeds (below).

The example shown here lists every continuance from 1860 when the chancery rules bill was filed, and June 1860 when a decree was issued, to September 1867 when the matter was dismissed.

The images Below right show a 2-page Complaint apparently filed in after the June term of 1857 (1859?) when a judgment was issued (files 105-1867_005_0002.pdf and 105-1867_005_0003.pdf).

The image below middle shows a Judgment issued on 18 June 1857 (1859?), which appears to be one referred to the complaint (file 105-1867_005_0005.pdf).

The image Below right shows a Summons issued on 3 April 1860 to appear before the court on the 1st Monday of May 1860 (file 105-1867_005_0007.pdf).

Click on images to enlarge

Howard 1867-005

1867-005

Ransom & Russel for Russel vs. John F. Howard

Bill in Chancery
Index 1867-005
Debt
Property

Ransom & Russel for Russel vs. John F. Howard

Continued 1860-1866
Closed 1867
Total litigation bef 1854-1867

An order issued by the Lee County Court on 3 April 1860 summoned John F. Howard to appear in court on Monday, 7 May 1860, to respond to a "bill in Chancery exhibited in our Court against him by John T. Ransom and Thomas E. Russel late merchants and partners in trade under the firm and style Ransom & Russel who are for the benefit of Thomas E. Russel."

The matter involves Howard's failure to pay money owed the firm on 6 March 1855 plus interest, pursuant to a court judgment dated 18 June 1857 (1859?), ordering him to pay a sum of "$138.93 with legal interest thereon from the 6th day of March, 1855 till payment, and the costs, be confirmed."

The bill raised sometime after June 1857 (1859?) and early 1860 avers that Howard had no personal property out of which he could execute payment, but that he owned 3 tracts of land that have a value comparable to the outstanding amount plus interest.

The tracts were as follows.

  1. the land on which he lives
  2. adjoining land he bought from James Fulkerson, and
  3. land in Poor Valley in Lee County

Ransom & Russel for Russel vs. John F. Howard appears to come on the heels of the conclusion of the earlier John M. Beaty vs. John F. Howard matters. 6 tracts of land were listed in the earlier matter, whereas only 3 tracts are listed here. This suggests that perhaps the earlier matter was resolved by the sale of 3 tracts, including one of the Poor Valley tracts.

Howard 1867-005 Howard 1867-005 Howard 1867-005 Howard 1867-005

Top  

21.3 Howard-Taylor

Hiram J. Howard and Jane Taylor

Table 21.3   Hiram J. and Martha J. (Taylor) Howard family
Table Name Birth Death Age Born Died Buried Vocation
0 Hiram Jackson Howard 6 Mar 1840 26 Feb 1928 87 Lee Co VA Molus Harlan Co KY Rose Hill Lee Co VA Farmer
0 Martha Jane Taylor Aug 1841 1900-1910 59-69 Kentucky House keeper
1 Lena Elizabeth c1861 c1922 60-61 Lee Co VA
2 Sarah Jane (Ingle) Mar 1864 aft 1930 ≥ 66 Owsley Co KY Harlan Co KY House keeper
3 William James Apr 1866 aft 1940 ≥ 74 Lee Co VA Wise Co KY Farmer
4 Jessie M. Jun 1868 aft 1930 ≥ 51 Lee Co VA Harlan Co KY Farmer
5 Mary E. (Ingle) c1870 1897-1898 27-28 Lee Co VA House keeper
6 Margaret S. Nov 1872 Aft 1900 ≥ 27 Lee Co VA
7 Charity S. c1875 bef 1900 5-25 Lee Co VA
7 Nancy Catharine (Johnson) 3 Dec 1878 20 May 1929 50 Lee Co VA Harlan Co KY House keeper
Hiram J. Howard Click on image to enlarge
June-August 1863, 6th Sub-District, Owsley County, Kentucky
Samuel Howard, 26, White, Farmer, Single, Kentucky
Hiram J. Howard, 23, White, Farmer, Married, Virginia born

Enrollments enumerated in June and August 1863, transcribed to this register on 1 February 1864
under direction of Capt. Robert Hays, Provost Marshal, 8th Congressional District, Kentucky

Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Hiram J. Howard Index card for Hiram J. Howard's War of the Rebellion pension application
Service "4 Battln. Ky. Inf. Miscl.", Class "Invalid"
Application No. 1,405,788 filed 5 September from Virginia
However, there is no certificate number
Copped and cropped from FamilySearch
Hiram J. Howard Click on image to enlarge Hiram J. Howard, died in Molus, Harlan County, Kentucky
Interred in Rose Hill, Lee County, Virginia
Maiden Name of Mother is actually the maiden name of Hiram's deceased wife Martha Jane Howard
Death certificates of other Howard-Mark siblings state "Elizabeth Mark"
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com

Molus and Rose Hill

Hiram J. Howard died in Molus in Harlan County, Kentucky, and was schlepped by an undertaker in Pineville in Bell County, Kentucky, to Ely-Morgan Cemetery in Rose Hill in Lee County, Virginia. How are these localities related, and why Ely Cemetery?

Pineville is the seat of Bell County, which was formed mostly from Harlan County and partly from Knox County in 1867, during the Reconstruction years immediately after the Civil War.

Molus, the center of Harlan County before its division in 1867, is now in the southwest of the county near it's border with Bell County, about halfway between Harlan and Pineville, the respective county seats, on a southwest bearing from Harlan.

Rose Hill is on the other side of the Cumberland Mountains, on a southeast bearing from Molus, in Lee County, Virginia. It is near several historically important sites between Jonesville to the east and Cumberland Gap to the east.

One site, in the vicinity of nearby Ewing, between Rose Hill and Cumberland Gap, marks a place where Thomas Walker (1715-1794) is believed to have camped when exploring and naming Cumberland Gap in 1750.

Another site, near Rose Hill, is Martin's Station, which originated with an outpost built in 1767 by Joseph Martin (1740–1808). Forced to abandon the settlemtn because of Cherokee and Shawnee raids in 1769, Martin returned in 1775, around the start of the Revolutionary War (1775-1783), and built a cluster of stockaded cabins. He again left the settlement after Cherokee attacks in May 1776, two months before the Decelaration of Independence.

During the Revolutionary War, Martin endeavored to keep regional Indians neutral if not pro-American, and he chastised those who supported Britain. In 1783, after the war, he rebuilt the station in what in 1793 became Lee County, and became increasingly involved in regional Indian affairs. Martin is best remembered for his official colonialist government agency in keeping peace with regional Indians and talking them out of their lands, but also for his role in their removal from the lands he and others persuaded or forced them to cede to the colonialists. He himself would marry a half-Cherokee woman as a second, common, or "frontier" wife, and was otherwise more sympathetic toward the plight of Indians than colonialists who criticized what they saw as laxity in his enforcement of alleged agreements.

As a bird would fly, the distance between Molus and Rose Hill is a bit further than the distance between Molus and either Harlan or Pineville. On the ground, it takes about 18 minutes to drive the 14 miles from Harlan to Molus, and another 23 minutes to drive the 18 miles from Molus to Pineville.

But there are no "gaps" in the Cumberlands southeast of Molus. One drives from Molus to Rose Hill either through Pennington Gap, 70 miles in 105 minutes -- or, more quickly, through Cumberland Gap, 50 miles in 60 minutes -- very roughly.

  1. Hiram Jackson Howard is generally "Hiram J." or "H.J." on documents. Some people appear to have known him as "Jack". He was born in Lee County in 1840, married Martha Jane Taylor on 4 August 1860, took his new family to Owsley County in Kentucky in 1863 during the Civil War, and returned to Lee County by 1866 a year after the war. He lived in Lee County until at least the 1910 census, but by the 1920 census he was living in Harlan County, Kentucky, where he died in 1928 -- but was buried in Lee County.
    1. "Hiram J. Howard" appears on a roster of eligible males in Owsley County, Kentucky, dated June-August 1863. His 3rd child, Sarah J. Howard, was born in Owsley County on March 1864. His 4th child, William Jackson Howard, was born in Lee County, Virginia, in 1866. Presumably he served about 1 year.
    2. The 1910 census enumerates "Hiram J. Howard" as "U.A." [Union Army] in the "Whether a Survivor of the Union or Confederate Army or Navy" box." He appears to have served in the 4th Battalion Kentucky Infantry Miscellaneous -- written "4 Battln. Ky. Inf. Miscl." on a record showing that he applied for a pension on 5 September 1912 (Application No. 1,405,788 -- no Certificate No.). This appears to have been a unit of volunteers. Its movements, and period and nature of Hiram's service, are not clear.
  2. Martha Jane Taylor first appears in the 1860 census of Hiram's Howard-Mark family -- with Hiram but as "Taylor" -- and with a 2-year-old girl named Clementine, who is also enumerated as "Taylor". They married on 4 August 1860 about 2 months after the census, and presumably set up their own household. Martha last appears with Hiram on the 1900 census as "Martha Howard" (58). He is "Wd" (widowed) on the 1910 census.
    1. See Howard-Taylor family in censuses (below) for particulars about their life together.
  3. Lena Elizabeth Howard (1861–1922) is "Cena E." on the 1870 census, "S.E." on the 1880 census, "Elizabeth" on the 1900 and 1910 censuses, and "Lizzie" on the 1920 census. Elizabeth is "Wd" (widowed) in the 1910 and 1920 censuses.
  4. Sarah Jane Howard married James David Ingle (b Jan 1858) on 22 February 1881 in Lee County, Virginia. The Ingles were neighbors of the Howards.
    1. The 1880 census for the 45th Enumeration District of Lee County (including White Shoals) shows "Jas. D. Ingle" (22), a son of "Wm. Ingle" (45) [William Ingle (1834–1912)] and "Mary Ingle" (43) [Mary (Dean) Ingle (1836–1919)]. James David Ingle is the 1st listed of 9 children the youngest 1 year old. A younger brother, "Jno. R. Ingle" (12) -- John R. Ingle (1867-1944), would marry Sarah's younger sister 12from ages 22-1
    2. The 1900 census for the White Shoals District of Lee County, Virgnia, shows "David Ingle" (42), born Jan 1858, farming with "Sarah J." (36), born Mar 1864. They had been married 19 years, and she had given birth to 8 children, all of whom were living -- and enumerated with them in the census. Sarah was born in Kentucky, everyone else in Virginia. She and David, and all the older children, were able to read and write.
    3. The 1910 census for Rose Hill District part of Bales Forge Precinct in Lee County, Virginia, shows "David J. Ingle" (52) farming with "Sarah J." (46). They had been married 29 years in what for each was a 1st marriage, and all 9 of the children she had borne were live. 6 children were enumerated in the household, the youngest born since the 1900 census. David and 2 of his sons were farm laborers working out. 2 sons worked for the railroad -- 1 as a railroad laborer, section hand, 1 as an agent, railroad office. Sarah was born in Kentucky, all others in Virginia. All the older members of the family could read and write.
    4. The 1920 census for District 1, Layman, in Harlan County, Virginia, enumerates "J.D. Ingle" (60) with his wife "S.J." (58) with 4 single sons ages 18-36. J.D. is a farmer on a general farm. 3 sons were "Section Laborers" working for a "Steam Rail Road". 1 son was a house carpenter. Everyone was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents.
    5. James David Ingle, born on 11 January 1858, the son of William Ingle and Mary Polly Dean, died in Lee County on 25 June 1929 at age 71. He is buried in "Beaty (J.M.) Cemetery" in Rose Hill in Lee County.
    6. The 1930 census for the Rose Hill Magisterial District of Lee County shows the household of "Hiram B. [Bascom] Ingle" (48) with his wife "Lizzie" (25), step son "Chance Walton" (5), and mother "Sarah J. Ingle" (66), widowed. Hiram and Lizzie were 47 and 24 when they married. Chance is presumably a child she brought to the marriage. Hiram, a farmer on a general farm he operates on his own account, was born in Virginia. Lizzie was born in Tennessee, Chance and Sarah in Kentucky.
  5. William Howard's names and ages vary as follows on decennial censuses.
    1. 1870  5 William J.
      1880 14 Wm. J.
      1890     destroyed
      1900 34 William
      1910 43 William J.
      1920 52 William J.
      1930     not found
      1940 74 W. J.
      1. His name on the 1985 death certificate of his son, Hiram Jessee Howard (1900-1985), gives his name as "William James Howard" -- hence "William James" (and not "William Jackson" on the above table. The "Apr 1866" birth date shown on the 1900 census best fits most of the age data.
    2. The 1880 census for the 45th enumeration district of Lee County, Virginia, shows "Wm. J. Howard" (14) as a laborer residing with his parents and 7 siblings. He is able to read but cannot write.
    3. The 1880 census for Rocky Station District in Lee County shows "Elisabth [sic] Parsons" (19) at home with her parents "Sam Parsons" (43) and "Nancy" (43). Sam is farming and Nancy is keeping house. All were born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents. Elizabeth can read but cannot write.
    4. 10 February 1898   "Wm. J. Howard", 30 [31 if per 1900 census], born in Lee County in 1868 [1900 census = Apr 1866], a son of E.J. and M.J. Howard, and "E. C. Parsons", 29 [27 if per 1900 census] born in Lee County in 1869 [1910 census = Oct 1860], a daughter of S. and Nancy B. Parsons, married in Lee County on 10 February 1898. Note that the information concerning their marriage comes from a transciption, not a scan, of a marriage record, which I cannot visually confirm confirm. All census figures are based on scans.
    5. The 1900 census for the White Shoals Magisterial District part of Lee County, Virginia, enumerates "William Howard" (34), born Apr 1866, with his wife "Elizabeth C." (39), Oct 1860, a son "Hiram J." (1/12), April 1900, and a servant, "Mary A. Parsons" (44), Oct 1855. William and Elizabeth have been married 2 years and she has had 1 child, who is still living. Mary has been married for 4 years and both of her 2 children survive. William was born in Virginia to a Kentucky-born father and Virginia-born mother. Elizabeth was born in Kentucky to Virginia-born parents. Their son, and the servant, were born in Virginia. William is a farmer on a farm he owns free of mortgage. He can neither read nor write. Elizabeth and Mary can read but not write.
    6. The 1910 census for the Jonesville District part of Lee County shows "William J. Howard" (43) with his wife "Elizabeth C." (49) and 2 children, "Hiram J.J.J." (12) and "Margaret E." (7). William and Elizabeth have been married 13 years in what for both was their 1st marriage. He is a farmer on a farm he owns without mortgage and operates on his own account. He was born in Virginia to a Kentucky-born father and Virginia-born mother, she in Kentucky to a Virginia-born father and Kentucky-born mother. Both can read but not write, but Hiram can neither read nor write.
    7. The 1920 census for the Gladsville District of Nortan Precinct in Wise County, Virginia, shows "William J. Howard" (52) with his wife "Elizabeth C." (57) and 2 children, "Hiram J." (19) and "Margarett E." (16) residing "Along L & N R R between Norton and [unread]". William is a laborer on a farm for wages. Hiram is a laborer in a coal company. William was born in Virginia to a Virginia-born father and Kentucky-born mother. Elizabeth was born in Kentucky to a Kentucky-born father and North Carolina-born mother. The children were born in Virginia. William and Margaret can both read and write. Neither Elizabeth nor Hiram can read or write.
    8. The 1940 census shows Yokum Station Magisterial District in Lee County, Virginia, shows "W. J. Howard" (74) and "Elizabeth C." (79) residing on "Road 606". As of 1 April 1935, they were living in a "R" (rural) town in Wise County, Virginia. He is "Unable to work" and she is a "House Keeper" working as a "House Wife" classified as an "unpaid family worker" who worked 52 weeks the previous year. He had completed the 4th grade, she the 5th grade.
    9. 25 December 1945   A Wise County, Virginia, marriage certificate shows that "Hiram Howard", 45, a laborer born in Lee County, Virginia, a resident of Norton, Virginia, father "W J Howard", mother "Elizabeth Parsons", married "Louise Osborne", 24, born in Wise County, a resident of Norton, father "L D Osborne, mother "Ida Hamilton", on 25 December 1945 in Ramsey, Virginia, pursuant to a license dated 22 December.
    10. 24 September 1945   "Hiram Jessee Howard" -- born on 12 April 1900 in Lee County, Virginia, to "William James [sic] Howard" and "Elizabeth Parsons", a resident of Norton, a maintenance worker at General Motors, died at age 85 of cardio-respiratory arrest due to chronic [unread] lung disease, with carcinoma of lung noted as a contributing condition. The informant was his wife Mary Louise Osborne Howard. He was slated for burial at Laurel Grove Cemetery in Norton.
  6. Jessie M. [Monroe?] Howard appears with in his father's household on the 1900 census as single. Within the next 20 years he was twice married and widowed.
    1. The 1910 census shows "Jessie M." (40), widowed, in his father's household, with 4 children -- "Dora E." (7), "Martha J." (5), "Hiram R. (4), and "Dewy M." (2).
    2. On 20 April 1916, "Jessie M. Howard" (46) married "Maggie Ely" (33) in Lee County, Virginia. She too had been married, as her maiden name was Dean, the daughter of Elizah and Helen Dean.
    3. The 1920 census shows "Jess Howard" (51) living again with his father, now on Jerrys Branch Road in Layman, Harlan County, Kentucky. Again, he is widowed, and has two "step sons" -- "Ransom" (14) and "Dewey" (12), referring to "Hiram R." and "Dewy M." in the 1910 census. The children are actually Hiram's grandsons and Jessie's sons with his 1st wife, Liza Smith.
      1. A Kentucky death certificate shows that "Dewey Monroe Howard" -- a miner born in Virginia on 5 October 1906, father Virginia-born "Jess M. Howard", mother Virginia-born "Liza Smith" -- died on 22 March 1947 in a rural hospital in "Truila" [sic = Trulia?] in Harlan County -- cause of death "Crushed body from slate fall / mine accident". The informant was his wife Dora Howard (1906-1999). They share a tombstone in Resthaven Cemetery in Keith in Harlan County, Kentucky.
    4. Jessie last appears in the 1930 census for Crab Orchard in Lincoln County, Kentucky, as "J.M. Howard" (62), widowed, the "father" of the head of household, "Rance Howard" (24), who works on a grain farm with his wife (30) and a daughter (4/12). Rance and his wife were 21 and 27 when they married. He, but not she, can read and write.
  7. Mary E. Howard, born around 1870, married John R. Ingle, the son of William Ingle (1834–1912) and Mary (Dean) Ingle (1836–1919), on 28 September 1888 in Lee County, Virginia. John R. Ingle (1867-1944) was a younger brother of James David Ingle, the husband of Mary's older sister Sarah. Mary appears to have died around 1897-1898, leaving at least one daughter, Annie.
    1. "John R. Ingle" (32), widowed, born in 1867, father "Wm. Ingle", mother "Polly Ingle", married "Mary Davidson" (19), born 1880, mother "Abbie Minton", in Lee County, Virginia, on 27 July 1899.
    2. The 1900 census for Rose Hill in the Bales Forge Voting Precinct shows "John Ingle" (32), born June 1868, as a boarder in the household of "John Haley" (31), his wife "Kate" (28), and 3 children ages 7-2. John, a day laborer, is "M" (married).
    3. The 1920 census for part of Rose Hill Magisterial District shows "John R. Ingle" (52), "D" (divorced), as the father-in-law of "Ray William" (31) and his wife "Annie" (26). Annie was implicity born around 1894, presumably John's daughter with Mary E. (Howard) Ingle.
    4. The 1930 census for Rose Hill Magisterial District shows "John Ingle" (61) still living with his daughter and son in law, Annie and William Ray, and 9 children ages 20-3. This time, though, he is "Wd" (widowed).
    5. A Virginia death certificate shows that "Hiram Crumley Ingle", a miner, died in Rose Hill on 6 November 1941 of "Pulmonary Tuberculosis" at age 44. He was born on 18 October 1897 in Rose Hill, Virginia, to "John R. Ingle" and "Mary E. Howard" -- both said to have been born in Hagan, Virginia, which is near Rose Hill in Lee County. Removal to Molus, Kentucky, was scheduled for 7 November 1941.
      1. 7 October 1897 seems to be the earliest that Mary E. (Howard) Ingle could have died.
    6. John R. Ingle is buried in buried in Ingle Cemetery in Lee County, Virginia. His tombstone reads "FATHER / JOHN R / INGLE / 1867-1944 / ASLEEP IN JESUS" (Find a Grave).
  8. Margaret is "Margaret S." on the 1880 census but just "Margaret" on the 1900 census, when she was 27. I cannot find her after this, hence her date of death "aft 1900" and age "≥ 27". The 1900 censes reports that she unable to read or write.
  9. Charity S. Howard, born about 1875, and listed on the 1880 census, appears to have been 1 of of the 2 of Martha's 8 children who were not alive at the time of the 1900 census.
  10. Nancy Catharine Howard is "Nannie" on some records. She married Andrew Jackson Johnson (1878-1963) on 30 June 1901 in Lee County, Virginia. Her Kentucky death certificate states that she was born in Lee County on 3 December 1878 and died in Molus, Harlan County, on 20 May 1929 of "Pallagra" [sic = Pellagra]. Her father was Virginia-born "Hiram J. Howard" and her mother was Kentucky-born "Martha J. Tayor". The informant was her husband, Andrew J. Johnson of Molus. She was to be buried in Molus. The certificate gives her "Color or race" as "Wh am" [White American?].
    1. The 1910 census shows the Johnson's residing in White Shoals, Lee County, Virginia, with 2 children (their 1st and 2nd).
    2. The 1920 census shows them with 2 children (their 2nd and 3rd) on Jerrys Branch Road in Layman, in Harlan County, Kentucky, where Catherine's father, Hiram J. Howard, is also then living. Andrew is a farmer. Their oldest son, Hiram B. Johnson (16), is a section hand on a steam rail road.

Top  

Howard-Taylor family in censuses

Howard-Taylor family in 1840 to 1830 censuses
1840 1850 1860 1870 1880 1890 1900 1910 1920 1930
Howard
Hiram J.
Born 1840 District 31
Lee County
Virginia
Married
Lee County
4 Aug 1860
White Shoals
Jonesville
Lee Co VA
45th Enumer-
ation District
Lee Co VA
Census data
destroyed
in fire
Bales Forge
Voting Prcnct
Rose Hill
Mgstrl Dstrct
Lee Co VA
White Shoals
Mgstrl Dstrct
Lee Co VA
Precinct 9
Layman
Harlan Co KY
Dies in
Molus KY
26 Feb 1928
Taylor
Martha J.
Born 1841 Harlan County
Kentucky
Martha dies
1910-1920
Martha does not appear in 1910 census
Hiram shown as widowed in 1920 census
Catharine Howard Death certificate showing "Hiram J. Howard" and "Martha J. Taylor" as parents of "Nancy Catharine [Howard] Johnson"
Born 3 Dec 1878 in Lee County, died 20 May 1929 in Molus Voting Precinct, Harlan County, Kentucky
Hiram born in Virginia, Martha in Kentucky, according to informant Andrew J. Johnson, their son
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com

Hiram J. Howard

Hiram J. Howard, son of John F. Howard and Elizabeth Mark, is easy to trace in all censuses during his lifetime, before and after his marriage shortly after the 1860 census.

  1. 6 March 1840   Hiram Jackson Howard is born in Lee County, Virginia, the 6th of 9 children and the 2nd of 4 sons of John Flannery Howard (1802–1870) and Elizabeth Denny Mark (1812–1853).
  2. 1840, 1850, 1860 censuses   See 21. Howard-Mark: John F. Howard and Elizabeth Mark (above) for enumerations of Hiram J. Howard in the 1840, 1850, and 1860 censuses for Lee Valley.

Martha J. Taylor

Hiram's wife, Martha J. Tayor, becomes clearly visible from the record of their marriage in 1860, shortly after the 1860 census. But I am unable to pin her down in the 1850 and 1860 censuses.

  1. 4 August 1860   "Hiram J. Howard" and "Martha J. Taylor" married on 4 August 1860 in Lee County, according to a transcription of a marriage record which shows Hiram's parents as "Jno F. Howard" and "E. Howard" and Martha's parents as "Wm. Taylor" and "Jane Taylor". The transcription says she was born in Harlan County and was 19 at the time of the marriage.
  2. As their marriage came 2 months after the 1860 census, both should appear in the 1860 and earlier censuses. Hiram J. Howard appears in the 1860 census with his parents, but Martha J. Taylor is not found in any census as a daughter of "Wm. Taylor" and "Jane Taylor".
  3. The 1850 census for District 1 of Harlan County, Kentucky, shows "Martha Taylor" (18) in the household of "William Taylor" (30), a farmer, and "Agnes" (30), and 4 younger children -- "Jesse M." (8), "Sally" (4), "Matilda" (3), and "Charity" (0). Only Agnes is unable to read or write.
    1. William was born in North Carolina. Agnes and all the children were born in Kentucky.
  4. The 1860 census for the Harlan Court House postal area of Harlan County, Kentucky, shows "Martha Taylor" (18) in the household of "William J. Taylor" (40) and "Agnes" (39), and 8 younger children -- "Jesse" (17), "Sarah" (14), "Matilda" (11), "Charity" (9), "Lena" (7), "Mary" (6), "James" (3), "No Name" (1) -- and "Lena Taylor" (75). William J. is a farmer with real and personal estates worth $500 and $300. Agnes is doing "Household duties", Martha "dom [domestic] Labour", and Jesse "Farm Labour". Only Agnes is unable to read or write. I would guess that the older Lena was William's mother.
    1. William was born in North Carolina, Jesse in Virginia, Agnes and all the other children in Kentucky, and the older Lena in Tennessee.
  5. There are numerous Taylor families in Harlan and Lee Counties.
    1. The 1850 census for District 1 of Harlan also shows the household of "Rial Taylor" (31) with "Nancy" (28) and 5 children -- "Martha" (9), "Leander" (7), "Drucilla" (5), "Burdine" (3), and "Manerva" (1). Rial is a farmer with real estate worth $50. Reach was born in Tennessee and Nancy was born in Virginia. All the children were born in Kentucky. Neither Rial nor Nancy can read or write.
    2. The 1850 census shows RESUME
  6. June-August 1863   A consolidated list of all "Class 1" persons residing in the 8th Congressional District of Kentucky -- "all persons subject to do military duty between the ages of twenty and thirth-five, and all unmarried persons subject to do military duty above the age of thirty-five years and under the age of forty-five" -- enumerated in June and August 1863 -- shows the following 2 Howard-Mark brothers under Owsley County.
    1. Samuel Howard, 26, White, Farmer, Single, Kentucky
      Hiram J. Howard, 23, White, Farmer, Married, Virginia
      1. The register lists eligible males by the 1st initial of their family name, and by county therein.
        It was probably compiled from registration cards roughly sorted by family-name and precisely sorted by county.
        The list is dated 1 February 1864. The age is as of 1 July 1863. The state is the place of birth.
        Note that this is not a list of conscriptees but only a list of persons who fall within the "Class 1" category of eligibility.
  7. The 1870 census for the White Shoals Township in the Jonesville Post Office area of Lee County enumerates "Hiram J. Howard" (30) with his wife "Martha J." (29) and 4 children -- "Cena E." (9), "Sarah J." (7), "William J." (5), and "Julius M." (2). Hiram's personal estate is worth $100 and he works on a farm. Martha is keeping house and all the children are at home. Hiram was born in Lee County, Virginia, Martha in Harlan County, Kentucky, and all the children were born in Lee County, Virginia -- except Sarah -- who was born in Owsley County, Kentucky -- implicitly in 1863-1864.
    1. The 1900 census for the White Shoals district of Lee County shows "Sarah J. Ingle" (36), born Mar 1864, as the wife of "David Ingle" (42), born Jan 1858, and 8 children ages 18-3. They have been married 19 years, and all 8 of Sarah's children are still living. David is renting but renting their home. Everyone was born in Virginia except Sarah.
      1. Martha gave birth to a child in Owsley County in March 1864.
        She probably conceived the child around June 1863.
        Hiram was registered as eligible for military service in Owsley County in June-August 1863.
        Hiram and Martha probably moved to Owsley County sometime in the spring or early summer 1863.
        Whether he was there at the time she gave birth in March 1864 is not clear.
  8. The 1880 census for the 45th enumeration district of Lee County, Virginia, shows "H.J. Howard" (40) with his wife "M.J." (37) and 8 children - "S.E." (19), "Sarah J." (16), "Wm. J." (14), "Jessee M." (11), "Mary E." (9), "Margaret S." (6), "Charity S." (5), and "Nancy C." (2). H.J. is a farmer, M.J. is keeping house, and Wm. J. is a laborer. M.J. cannot read, her daughter S.E. is blind and can neither read nor write, Wm. J. can read but not write, and Jessee M. can neither read nor write.
    1. Everyone is born in Virginia except M.J. and her daughter Sarah J., who were born in Kentucky.
    2. Moreover, everyone's father was born in Virginia -- except Martha's father, who was born in Tennessee. And everyone's mother was born in Kentucky -- except Hiram's mother, who was born in Virginia.
  9. The 1900 census for the Bales Forge Voting Precinct in the Rose Hill Magisterial District part of Lee County, Virginia, shows "H. J. Howard" (59), born Mar 1841, with his wife "Martha" (58) Aug 1841 -- plus 5 children, "Elizabeth" (38) Aug 1861, "Jessee" (31) June 1868, "Margaret" (27) Nov 1872, and "Nannie" (21) Dec 1878 -- and 3 grandchildren, "Sven Ingle" (10) Jany 1890, "Polly Ingle" (8) Jany 1892, and "Hiram Ingle" (2) Oct 1897. H.J. and Martha have been married 38 years and 6 of her 8 still are still living. H.J. is a farmer and Jessee is a farm laborer. H.J. is renting their house. Martha can read but not write. Among her 4 children, only Nannie can read and write -- Elizabeth, Jessee, and Margaret are illiterate.
    1. Everyone is born in Virginia -- except M.J., who was born in Kentucky.
    2. Moreover, the father of everyone in the Howard family was born in Virginia -- except Martha's father, who was born in Tennessee. And the mother of everyone in the Howard family was born in Kentucky -- except Hiram's mother, who was born in Virginia.
    3. The place-of-birth reports in the 1880 and 1900 censuses the same.
      Hiram and Martha consistently report their own and their parents' places of birth.
  10. The 1910 census for the White Shoals Magisterial District part of Lee County, Virginia, shows "Hiram J. Howard" (70) with his daughter "Elizabeth" (47), widowed, and son "Jessie M." (40), widowed -- and 5 grandchildren, "Hiram L. Ingle" (12), "Dora E. Howard" (7), "Martha J. Howard" (5), "Hiram R. Howard" (4), and "Dewy M. Howard" (2). Elizabeth has given birth to no children. Everyone was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents ("Virginia" is stamped on the sheet while other states are handwritten). Hiram J. and Jessie are farmers on a general farm they seem to own free of mortage. Elizabeth she can neither read nor write. Jessie can read but not write. Hiram J. Howard is enumerated as "U.A." [Union Army] in the "Whether a Survivor of the Union or Confederate Army or Navy" box.
    1. Martha does not appear in this household with Hiram and I and haven't found her in another household. Hiram, however, is enumerated as "M" (married). Since he is "Wd" (widowed) in the 1920 census, Martha appears to have died between 1910-1920. One family tree says she died on 26 January 1915 in Lee County but I cannot confirm this.
  11. The 1920 census for Precinct 9, Layman, in Harlan County, Kentucky, shows "Hiram Howard" (79), widowed, residing on "Jerrys Branch Road" with his daughter "Lizzie" (57), widowed, his son "Jess" (51), widowed, and 2 "step sons" -- "Ransom Howard" (14) and "Dewey M. Howard" (12). Hiram is a farmer on a general farm he operates on his own account. Jess has no occupation. Hiram and his children were born in Virginia to a Virginia-born father and Kentucky-born mother. The "step sons" are actually Hiram's "grandsons" and Jessie M. Howard's children from his 1st marriage with Liza Smith between the 1900 and 1910 censuses.
  12. 26 Feb 1928   "Hiram J. Howard" -- Male, White, Widowed, husband of "Martha Jane Howard -- dies in Molus in Harlan County, Kentucky, of "Old age no doctor attended" -- at age 87 years 11 months 20 days. William was born on "March-6-1840" in Lee County, Virginia -- father's name "John F. Howard", place-of-birth "Unknown" -- mother's maiden name "Martha Jane Taylor" [sic = wife's maiden name], Harlan County, Kentucky. The informant was a "Mrs. Thmos" [sic] of "Hulen Ky" [Harlan County]. "W.F. Durham undertaker" of "Pineville Ky" [Harlan County] signed as the M.D. who confirmed the diagnosis. The undertaker was "Pineville Und Co" in Pineville. The place of burial or removal was "Rose Hill Va" and the burial was scheduled for 27 February 1928.

Top  

Howard-Mark graves

William Bascom Wetherall's maternal-paternal-maternal great-great grandparents

John F. Howard and Elizabeth Mark, parents of Rebecca and Margaret Baldwin

John F. and Elizabeth Howard

Forthcoming.

Top  

11. Steele-Grubb

Jonas Steele and Elizabeth Grubb

Table 11   Jonus and Elizabeth (Grubb) Steele family
Table Name Birth Death Age Born Died Buried Vocation
0 Jonas Steele 18 Mar 1815 4 Oct 1868 53 Whitley Co, KY Whitley Co, KY Bingham Cem Corbin KY Farmer
0 Elizabeth Grubb 28 Jul 1820 12 Apr 1888 67 NC Whitley Co, KY Wilson Cem Moores Creek KY House keeper
1 Preston B. Steele 1 Mar 1838 8 Feb 1883 44 KY KY Bingham Cem Corbin KY Farmer
2 Julia 15 Jun 1840 aft 1850 KY
3 William Danley Steele 1 Aug 1844 5 Mar 1909 64 KY McKee Jackson Co KY Steele Cem Foxtown KY Farmer
4 George Conrad Steele 31 Dec 1846 30 Nov 1909 62 Watts Creek Whitley Co KY Corbin Creek Whitley Co KY
5 James Henry Steele 7 Apr 1849 15 Jan 1923 73 Whitley Co KY Laurel Co KY Hacker Cem Jackson KY Farmer
6 Sarah Hellen (McFarland) 20 Dec 1852 18 Dec 1909 55 Whitley Co KY Jackson Co KY
7 Nancy Elizabeth (Brewer) 19 Jul 1855 11 Dec 1926 71 Whitley Co KY
8 John Wesley Steele 27 Nov 1857 13 Dec 1909 52 Whitley Co KY Hazel Patch Laurel Co KY Farmer
9 Martha Jane (Reese) 4 Apr 1860 14 May 1911 51 Whitley Co KY
T5 10 Martha Ellen (Steele) 14 Oct 1863 27 Apr 1943 79 Jackson KY St. Maries ID Woodlawn Cem ID Wife
  1. Jonas was the son of Samuel Steele and Jerusha Powers. Elizabeth was the daughter of George Conrad Grubb and Lydia Poe.
    Elizabeth was born in Virginia (1850 census), in Kentucky (1860 census), in Virginia or Kentucky (1870 census), or in North Carolina (1880 census). Cenuses from 1900 through 1930 for her daughter Martha Ellen (Steele) Baldwin state that Ellen's mother was born in Virginia (1900), North Carolina (1910, 1930), and the United States (1920).
    The 1870 census states that Elisabeth [sic = Elizabeth] (50), keeping house, could not write.
  2. Preston reportedly served as a private in Co. F. of the 16th Kentucky Infantry, a Union Army regiment formed in Kentucky in December 1861 several months after the outbreak of the Civil War. His headstone is reportedly beside his father's tombstone.
  3. Julia was "Juliane" or "Juliana" (10) on 1850 census. She has either left in marriage or died by 1860 census.
  4. William reportedly married Sarah O. Prewitt (1843-1905) and they had at least one child, Arnette S. (Steele) Lakes (1870-1944).
  5. George's namesake was his maternal grandfather. He reportedly fathered 4 children with his 1st wife Barbara Ellen Steele (1853–1883) and 8 with his second wife Ida Suphrona Steele (1874–1947).
    The 1870 census states that George (23), farmer, could neither read nor write.
    His 2nd child and 1st son with Barbara was Martin Wesley Steele (1876–1945), who became a phyisican in Corbin, Kentucky. Martin's son, Starr Emery Steele (1901-1988), became an optomitrist, also in Corbin. See "Dr. Starr Steele" below for particulars.
  6. James married Caroline B. Taylor (1850-1888), with whom he fathered about 4 children. Caroline died on 14 January 1888, and 10 months later, on 11 October 1888, James married Sophia Peters (1865-1941), with whom he fathered 9 children before his death in 1923.
    The 1870 census states that James H. (21), a farmer, could neither read nor write.
    1. James H. Steele and his 2nd wife Sophia named their 2nd child "Martha Ellen". She, like her father's youngest sister and namesake Martha Ellen (Steele) Baldwin, was generally known as "Ellen". Ellen Steele the daughter James H. Steele was therefore a 1st cousin of the children of his youngest sister Ellen (Steele) Baldwin -- i.e., the Baldwin sisters, including my father's mother Ida Baldwin. My father (William B. Wetherall) and Ellen (Steele) Hacker's children were 2nd cousins, which makes me (William O. Wetherall) and my siblings 3rd cousins of Hacker-Steele grandchildren. See Jackson Hacker and James Henry Steele under Baldwin deeds (below) for particulars about James Steele and Martha Ellen (Steele) Hacker. For a family tree showing James Steele and Ellen Hacker as blood relatives in the Steele-Grubb family, and as in-law relatives to the Baldwin-Howard family, see Collateral lines in the same Baldwin deeds section.
  7. Sarah reportedly married Andrew Craig McFarland (1847-1924) and they had 7 children.
  8. "Nancy E. Steele" was born to "John Steele" ("Name of Father or Owner of Child") and "Elizabeth Grubb" ("Maiden Name of Mother") on 19 July 1855, according to a Whitley County, Kentucky birth register. She reportedly married James S. Brewer (1853-1927) in 1877 and they had 7 children.
    The 1870 census states that Nancy E. (15) could neither read nor write.
    The 1880 census shows Nancy E. (34) keeping house, wife of James Brewer (26), laborer, with a daughter, Mary E. (1), in the family enumerated immediately following (thus probably neighboring or adjoining) her mother's household.
  9. The 1870 census reports that John W. (12), farm hand, could neither read nor write.
  10. Mary Jane reportedly married Howell Reese.
  11. Martha Ellen -- "Ellen" to her family and "M. Ellen" on her tombstone -- was the last born of the Steele-Grubb union. Her father died shortly before she turned 5, after which she was raised by her mother as head of the remaining family, supported by older brothers.
    The 1880 shows Martha E. (15) living at home with her mother, Elizabeth, keeping house, for herself and John W. (22), a laborer, and Martha E. (15), at home. Their farm, judging from the census, was next door to the Baldwin farm.
    Ellen married Newton Bascum Baldwin, probably in Jackson County, Kentucky, on 5 December 1880. The census taken earlier that year shows them residing on neighboring farms. She and Bascum, as he was called, had 4 daughters. See "5. Baldwin-Steele" and "Baldwin sisters" et cetera for particulars.
    Ellen was "Mother" to Ida Mae (Baldwin) Wetherall and "Grandma Baldwin" to Ida's son, William B. Wetherall.

All children in the above table are listed in 19th century Steele-Grubb family censuses. However, their full names, birth and death dates, and other particulars are patched together from various Ancestry.com and other sources, many of them unconfirmed.

Jonas and Elizabeth had 10 children according to census records. There are a couple of gaps in the sequence of their births, during which they may have had a child or two who died at birth or in infancy between censuses.

Literacy in the Steele-Grubb family

The 1870 census shows that Elisabeth [sic = Elizabeth] (50), keeping house, could not write. It also shows that 4 of the 7 children still living with her after Jonas's death in 1868 George (23) and James H. (21), both farmers, Nancy E. (15), and John W. (12), farm hand -- could neither read nor write. Sarah H. (17) appears to have been literate. Mary J. (9) and Martha E. (6), were perhaps too young to be included in this part of the education section of the census.

The 1850 census shows only Elizabeth (40) as being unable to read or write. It appears that, by the 1870 census, she had learned to read.

Whatever the conditions that prevented so many of the Steele children from learning to read and write, Ellen -- 6 years old in 1870 -- would complete 8 years of grade school education before she married in 1880, according to the 1940 census. All 4 of her children would finish high school and a year or two of post-high-school vocational education.

See Educating daughters under "Anstine sisters" above for further details.

Top  

Chronology of Steele-Grubb family

The Steele-Grubb family descends from England, Scotland, Ireland, Germany and other European lines, through lines in American colonies and territories including New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, North Carolina, and Kentucky.

See 4th cousins X removed: Steele-Grubb connections with David Crockett for a look at the possible crossing of paths of the Steele line of the Steele-Grubb family with an offshoot of the Crockett ancestors of Davy Crockett.

Steele-Grubb family in 1810 to 1880 censuses
1810 1820 1830 1840 1850 1860 1870 1880 1900
Steele
Jonas
Born 1815 1820 Married
1836
Whitley
County
Kentucky
District 2
Whitley
Kentucky
Jellico
Whitley
Kentucky
Jonas died 1868
Grubb
Elizabeth
1810 Born 1820 Jofields
Whitley
Kentucky
Pond Creek
Jackson
Kentucky
Elizabeth
died 1888

Steele-Grubb chronology

Jonas Steele was born on 18 March 1815 in Whitley County, Kentucky.

Elizabeth Grubb was born on 28 July 1820 in Kentucky if not in Virginia or North Carolina.

There is some confusion about whether Elizabeth was born in Virginia, Kentucky, or North Carolina. The 1850 census says Virginia and the 1860 census says Kentucky. The 1870 census says "Va, Ky" and the 1880 census says North Carolina. The 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, and 1940 censuses for Elizabeth's daughter, Martha Ellen (Steele) Baldwin favor North Carolina but don't rule out Virginia. Such variation shows why census (and other recorded) information must always be taken as tentative until substantiated by independent (and hopefully reliable) data. People's memories can be very shaky, and census enumerators can make mistakes in their rush to record what they think they been told and heard.

Jonas Steele's places of birth

1850 census   (J) Kentucky
1860 census   (J) Kentucky

Elizabeth (Grubb) Steele's and parents' places of birth

1850 census   (E) Virginia
1860 census   (E) Kentucky
1870 census   (E) Virginia, Kentucky
1880 census   (E) North Carolina, (F) Germany, (M) Virginia

Martha Ellen (Steele) Baldwin's and parents' places of birth

1870 census   (ME) Kentucky
1880 census   (ME) Kentucky, (F) Kentucky, (M) North Carolina
1900 census   (ME) Kentucky, (F) Kentucky, (M) Virginia
1910 census   (ME) Kentucky, (F) North Carolina, (M) North Carolina
1920 census   (ME) Kentucky, (F) United States, (M) United States
1930 census   (ME) Kentucky, (F) Virginia, (M) North Carolina
1940 census   (ME) Kentucky

Jonas and Elizabeth married in 1838.

1840 census shows a "Jonas Steel" family with 3 free whites -- 1 male 0-9, 1 male 20-29, and 1 female 15-19 living in Whitley County, Kentucky. One member is engaged in agriculture. The ages agree with what is known about Jonas Steele (b1815), Elizabeth (Grubb) Steele (b1820), and their son Preston B. Steele (b 1 March 1838).

1850 census shows the family of Jonas Steel [sic = Steele] (35), a farmer born in Kentucky, living in District 1 of Whitley County, Kentucky on real estate valued at 400 dollars. His household includes his wife, Elisabeth [sic = Elizabeth] (30), born in Virginia and unable to read or write, with 5 children -- Preston (12), Juliane or Juliana (10), William (7), George (4), and James (1), all born in Virginia [sic = Kentucky]. Living with them are Susan Banton (30), born in Virginia and unable to read or write, and Martha Banton (2), born in Kentucky.

1860 census shows "Jonas Steel" (45), a farmer, living in the Jellico District (post office Wild Cat) of Whitley County, Kentucky. His real and personal estates are valued at 1,000 and 300 dollars. Living with him are Elizabeth (40) and 8 children, Preston (22), William D. (15), George C. (13), James H. (11), Sarah R. (9), Nancy E. (5), John W. (2), and Mary J. (2/12). Elizabeth, Preston, and William are also farmers, and all members in the household are reportedly born in Kentucky.

Steele 1863 Jonas Steele's last will and testament "In the name of god aman"
Copped and cropped from Ancestor.com

1863-09-23 Three weeks before the birth of Martha Ellen, Jonas Steele creates a will leaving his main farm and related property to his wife Elizabeth with a provision that, should she remarry, her husband would not have control of whatever was left of his legacy. He designated his older brother Oliver Steele (1807-1880) his executor. Oliver died in Jackson county.

Martha Ellen Steele was born on 14 October 1863 in Whitley County, Kentucky. She would be the last child born to Jonas Steele and Elizabeth Grubb.

Jonas died on 4 October 1868 in Whitley County, Kentucky. He is buried at Bingham Cemetery in Corbin, Whitley County, Kentucky.

1870 census shows the family of "Elisabeth Steele" [sic = Elizabeth] (50) living in the Jofields Precinct (post office Rockholds) of Whitley County, Kentucky. She is keeping house, and her real and personal estates are valued at 200 dollars each. Living with her were 7 children, George (23), a farmer, James H. (21), also a farmer, Sarah H. (17), Nancy E. (15), John W. (12), a farm hand, Mary J. (9), and Martha E. (6). Elizabeth is unable to write, and George, James, Nancy, and John are unable to either read or right. Both George and James are "Male Citizens of U.S. of 21 years of age and upwards". Everyone is reportedly born in Kentucky, except Elizabeth, whose place of birth is shown as "Va, Ky" as though she didn't know which -- or perhaps she was born in a part of Virginia that had become Kentucky.

1880 census shows both the families of John R. Baldwin (51) and Elizabeth Steele (59) living next door to each other in Pond Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky. N.B. Baldwin (19), like his father, is a laborer. Martha E. Steele is 15 and at home. Her brother, John B. (22), is a laborer. Most of the laborers are probably working in a coal mine. The census was enumerated on 2 June. N. Bascum and M. Ellen would marry on 5 December that year.

Elizabeth Steele died on 12 April 1888 at age 67, in Whitley County. She is buried at Wilson Cemetery in Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky.

Top  

Steele headstones Steele headstones

Top left
Field with Jonas Steele's headstone (left)
Bingham Cemetery, Corbin, Kentucky
Photograph by Dale Steele copped from
Find a Grave

Top right
Jonas Steele's headstone
Bingham Cemetery, Corbin, Kentucky
Photograph by Dale Steele copped from
Find a Grave

Right top
Elizabeth Steele's headstone
Wilson Cemetery, Moores Creek, Kentucky
Photograph by Caroline York copped from
Find a Grave

Right bottom
James H. Steele's headstone
Hacker Cemetery, Jackson County, Kentucky
Photograph by Talilath copped from
Find a Grave

Bottom left
Caroline B. Steele's headstone
Hacker Cemetery, Jackson County, Kentucky
Photograph by Talilath copped from
Find a Grave

Bottom right
Sophia Steele's headstone
Elza-Swanner Cemetery, Greenmount, Laurel County, Kentucky
Photograph by SJP copped from
Find a Grave

Steele headstones
Steele headstones
Steele headstones Steele headstones
Steele headstones Martha Ellen Hacker's headstone
Hacker Cemetery, Jackson County, Kentucky
Photograph by Talilath copped from Find a Grave
Steele headstones Jackson Hacker's headstone
Hacker Cemetery, Jackson County, Kentucky
Photograph by Talilath copped from Find a Grave

Robert "Bob" and Eula Mae Hacker's tombstone
Liberty Cemetery, Egypt, Jackson County, Kentucky
Photograph by TLT copped from Find a Grave

Robert Hacker, born 24 June 1924, died 10 October 1996, is enumerated as "Star" (5) on 1930 census for Pond Creek, and "Starr" (16) on 1940 census for Magisterial District No. 3 (Pond Creek) in Jackson County, Kentucky. The 1940 census shows him working for pay as a farm laborer on a farm, probably of his parents, Jack and Ellen Hacker, with whom he is living with 3 older and 3 younger siblings. Robert and Eula Mae married on 20 May 1948.

Hacker headstone

Steele-Grubb graves

William Bascom Wetherall's maternal-maternal great grandparents

Jonas Steele and Elizabeth Grubb, parents of M. Ellen (Steele) Baldwin

There are many Steele graves in Kentucky. A number of them are of members of the Steele line of the Steele-Grubb family of Jonas and Elizabeth (Grubb) Steele.

Jonas and Elizabeth Steele

Jonas Steele died on 4 October 1868 at age 48 in Whitley County, Kentucky. He is buried at Bingham Cemetery in Corbin in Whitley County. His tombstone is a roughly hewn slab of rock with the following roughly chiseled inscription, using what appears to be DC or DCD for "deceased".

JONAS STEELE / WAS BORN MARCH / 18 1815 DCD OCT / 4 1863

Elizabeth (Grubb) Steele died on 12 April 1888 at age 67 also in Whitley County. However, she is buried at Wilson Cemetery in Moores Creek, Jackson County, about 50 kilometers (30 miles) north of Corbin. Her tombstone is of a more refined design and crafting.

ELIZABETH STEELE / JULY 28, 1820 / APR. 2, 1888

Steele-Grubb children

Jonas and Elizabeth had at least 10 children. All 5 sons and at least 1 daughter died in Kentucky. The youngest child and daughter, Martha Ellen (Steele) Baldwin, died in Idaho (see "Baldwin-Steele graves" above). The locations of the tombs of the following children are known.

  1. Preston B. Steele (1838-1883)
    Bingham Cemetery, Corbin, Whitley County, Kentucky
    Marker beside headstone of father Jonas Steele, Kentucky
  2. William D. Steele (1844-1909)
    Steel [sic = Steele] Cemetery, Foxtown, Jackson County, Kentucky
  3. George C. Steele (1846-1909)
    Sharp Cemetery, Rockholds, Whitley County, Kentucky
  4. James H. Steele (1849-1923)
    Hacker Cemetery, Jackson County, Kentucky
  5. 1st wife Caroline B. Taylor (1850-1888)
    2nd wife Sophia Peters (1865-1941)
    Daughter Martha Ellen Steele (1892-1977)
    Son-in-law Jackson Hacker (1891-1950)
  6. M. Ellen (Steele) Baldwin (1863–1943)
    Woodlawn Cemetery, St. Maries, Benewah County, Idaho

Top  

Steele-Powers graves

William Bascom Wetherall's maternal-maternal-paternal great-great grandparents

Samuel Steele and Jerusha Powers, parents of Jonas Steele

No graves clearly related to the Steele-Powers family of Samuel Steele and Jerusha Powers have yet been found. Presumably they are buried in Kentucky, where they settled and died, while some of their ancestral graves are probably in Virginia, where both were born.

Jerusha (Powers) Steele

"Jerusha Steele" is supposed to have died in 1850. She may well be the "Gerusha Steele" who the morality schedule of the 1850 census for Whitley County, Kentucky records has having died in May 1850 during the year ending 1 June 1850.

Schedule 3 of the 1850 census enumerated "Persons who Died During the Year Ending 1st June 1850". The schedule enumerated 11 items of information -- 1. Name of every person who died during the year ending 1st June, 1850, whose usual place of abode at the time of his death was in his family, 2. Age, 3. Sex, 4. Race (White, black, or mulatto), 5. Free or slave, 6. Married or widowed, 7. Place of birth (Naming the state, territory, or country), 8. The month in which the person died, 9. Profession, occupation, 10. Disease, or cause of death, 11. Number of days ill.

The mortality schedule for Districts 1 and 2 of Whitley County, Kentucky enumerated 66 persons on three sheets, each of which had 35 lines. The single sheet for District 1 shows 22 people (Sheet 1), most of them children. One family alone lost 5 children in October 1849 to "fever". The two sheets for District 2 showed 44 people (35 on Sheet 2, 9 on Sheet 3).

The enumerator for District 2 wrote and signed the following statement under "Remarks" at the bottom of Sheet 2.

Several have The Typhoid fever was more fatal than [Common?] in my division during the last year. The Bloody flux has been raging in my division during the last [season?] and several have died since June 1850. The water is [free stored and pure?]. [Signed] W. [Flevok?]

Causes of death included fever, croup, consumption, worms, I brain (inflammation of brain), not known, T fever (typhoid fever), old age, jaundice, C birth (childbirth), accident, P [sore?] throat (putrid sore throat), chronic, B flux (bloody flux) [dysentery], D eating (dirt eating), and measles.

The "Race" and "Free or slave" columns are blank except for two individuals. One (District 1) was a Georgia-born 65-year-old man named "Jeff" who was "B" (Black), "S" (Slave), and "S" (Single). The other (District 2) was a Kentucky-born 4-year-old girl named "Elizabeth" who was "S" (Slave). Both died of typhoid fever. And both were the only people whose family name, if they had one, was not recorded.

1st sheet -- 22 persons, no Steeles
2nd sheet -- 35 persons, 6 Steeles
   2. Edmund Steele       72 M M Virginia May    Farmer T Fever    18
   3. Rebecca Steele      70 F M Virginia April         Old age
  10. Gerusha Steele      70 F W Virginia May           Psre throat 3
  14. Elizabeth A Steele   2 F S Kentucky Sept          B flux     16
  17. Sarah J Steele    2/12 F   Kentucky March         Fever      12
  35. James Steele        40 M   Kentucky Febry         T Fever    20
3rd sheet -- 9 persons, 1 Steele
   1. Susan Steele        36 F W Kentucky Dec?          T Fever    21

Gerusha Steele died of a putrid sore throat (P sore throat), which was probably a severe case of what would later be called a streptococcal infection or "strep throat". Edmund, James, and Susan died of typhoid fever (T fever), Sarah of just a fever, Elizabeth of bloody flux (dysentery), and Rebecca of just old age. Among the 66 people who reportedly died in Whitley County from June 1849 through May 1850, about 1/3rd died of typhoid fever and 1/6th of fever, which together accounted for 1/2 of all deaths.

Edmund and Rebecca Steele

Edmund Steele and Rebecca Steele, both born in Virginia and of similar age, are listed in succession. They may have been husband and wife.

James Steele and Susan Steele, both born in Kentucky, of similar age and both victims of typhoid fever, were also listed in succession. They, too, may have been husband and wife.

The other Steeles are not listed successively, perhaps because they were members of different Steele households.

Steeles in Baldwin-Steele

These are merely hunches. There were many Steeles in the area, some with the same or similar names. However, the ages of Gerusha, Edmund, and Rebecca in 1850 make them strong candidates for regard as members of the Steele family in the Baldwin-Steele line.

The "Edmund" Steele in the 1850 mortality schedule appears to be the "Edmond" Steele that some Steele family trees report was born 2 November [11 August?] 1777 in Montgomery County, Virginia, and died 4 May 1850 in Whitley County, Kentucky. The "Edmond" in family histories appears to have been a younger brother of Jonas Steele's father Samuel Steele (1775-1822), hence Jonas Steele's uncle and Martha Ellen Steele's great uncle. He was reportedly buried at Faddis Cemetery in Gap O'Ridge, Kentucky.

"Edmond" is said to have married Rebecca Beard on 17 September 1800 in Grayson County, Virginia. She was reportedly born 25 December 1778 in Virginia to Martin Beard and an unknown mother, died on 12 April 1857 in Whitley County, and also been buried at Faddis Cemetery.

The following Steeles are interred at Faddis Cemetery.

Edmond Steele (1777-1850)
Joseph Steele (1808-1889)
Rebecca (Beard) Steele (1778-1857)
Susannah (Hart) Steele (1810-1892)
William Steele (1863-1863)

The "Edmund" in the mortality schedule was 72 at the time of death in May 1850. The "Edmond" in the Steele family histories was also 72 at the time of his death in May 1850. They would appear to be the same person.

The "Rebecca" in the mortality schedule was 70 at the time of her death in April 1850. The "Rebecca" in the Steele family histories was 78 at the time of her death in April 1857. She would have been 71 in April 1850. It is not impossible that the two Rebecca Steeles are one and the same woman. But it is also possible that they were different.

"Gap o' the Ridge" was apparently the location of a two-room school that is no longer there. Some local people today apparently know the Faddis Cemetery as the Old Steele Cemetery.

Robert Steele in Steele-family lore

Linda (Henderson) Lewis), a Steele descendant, accepts the common wisdom among Steele family genealogists that the Steele line started in Scotland. She credits a "Mac McKinney" for providing lots of missing info on Edmond Steele and beyond. She digests the stories she has received about Robert Steele, allegedly the first American-born in her Steele line, like this.

The comments and data in [brackets] are mine (WOW). I have culled the data from various sources, some of which vary with Linda's account. All the following information is tentative.

Linda (Henderson) Lewis's story

Robert Steele [1750-1821] is my 5th Great Grandfather. He left his family home about 1770 and returned to Prince Edward County in Virginia where he married Mary "Polly" Keeling [1753-c1788] and settled back in the New River Area about 1771 or 1772. A hurried trip back to North Carolina by Samuel [Robert's older brother, bc1749] and Robert in 1773 is presumed to be connected to the death of Reuben [their father, 1720-c1770] who was lost at sea. Mary died in the late 1780's [c1788] and her 7 childres [sic] grew up without her. Robert then married Rebecca Oury [1770-c1835], a daughter of Wendel Oury and Katherine Peterpenner about a year later [c1890-1893]. This union produced 8 children. Robert's history is well documented in the book "A Gathering Of The Clan" by Carl Steele Jr. His military service is listed in the company of Capt Alexander Sayers. His will is recorded in 1821 shortly before his death and is listed in Carl Steele's book. It is not known if Robert was able to read or write since his last will was signed with an X and prefaced with "Rob" and witnessed by Samuel Repass, John Cregar and William Perry.

Mary Keeling's middle name seems to be "Helen". The name Kelen [sic] is carried through the family and several girls are so named. It is known that she was born and raised in Prince Edward County, Virginia and met Robert there when his family was temporarily displaced from Wythe County by Indian attacks. Robert's father Reuben, took his family to the Yadkin valley in North Carolina from their retreat in Prince Edward County and Robert brought Mary back to Wythe County after they were married about 1772. Mary's father and mother have been researched without success.

(NOTE: The above info was researched and provided by a Steele "Cousin")

Top  

Dr. Starr Steele

Lennie (Anstine) Severns's granddaughter, Darci Severns, related the following story to me (email, 30 October 2013).

Both my grandma Lennie and auntie Aura talked about a "cousin" named Dr. Starr Steele from Corbin Kentucky. I believe there was the first Dr. Starr Steele, perhaps a cousin of Lydia's and Ida's and recalling hearing that he had a grandson with the same name and was also a Dr. In Corbin. On Ancestry.com I've found a Starr Steele born in 1902 in Corbin Kentucky. It doesn't say that the person is a doctor. It does appear to be a man, cause the spouse's name is Lora.

This is typical of the hand-me-down stories I heard from my own parents and relatives, especially my mother and maternal grandmother, and am known to tell my own children. Such stories include hearsay within hearsay, which is inevitable when relating stories we hear from others who are themselves relating stories they have heard passed down to them. Such stories always have to be threshed to loosen the chafe from the grain, and then winnowed to separate the grain from the chafe.

Doctors Martin and Starr Steele

My pursuit of the kernal of truth in Darci's "Dr. Starr Steele" story led through a number of censuses and other records back to Martha Ellen Steele's family.

Dr. Starr Emery Steele (1901-1988) was the son of Dr. Martin Wesley Steele (1876-1945).
Dr. Martin W. Steele was the son of George Conrad Steele (1846-1909).
George C. Steele was an older brother of Martha Ellen Steele (1863–1943).

So Dr. Martin Steele was Ellen's nephew, Lydia's 1st cousin, and Lennie and Aura's 1st cousin once removed. And Dr. Starr Steele was Ellen's grand nephew, Lydia's 1st cousin once removed, and Lennie's and Aura's 2nd cousin.

Martin Steele was a farmer at the time of his marriage. He later became a physician.

Starr Emery Steele -- described in the 1930 census as a "physician (optometrist)" as opposed to his father, a "physician (general practice)" -- was an optometrist. He served several terms as president of the Kentucky Association of Optometrists and was also an officer of the 12-state Southern Council of Optometrists.

Martin W. Steele was Ellen (Steele) Baldwin's nephew, and Starr E. Steele was her grand nephew. Martin was a 1st cousin of the Baldwin sisters Sadie, Lydia, Meda, and Ida, and Starr was a 2nd cousin of the children of the Baldwin sisters, including Faye and Claude Williams (Sadie), Velma, Lennie, Aura, and Imogene Anstine (Lydia), Greta and Dale Ure (Meda), and William B. Wetherall (Ida) -- all of whom were 1st cousins.

That Lennie and Aura recalled a "Dr. Starr Steele" suggests that the families kept in touch, at least by mail, but probably also through visits. Ellen most likely visited Kentucky during one of her sojourns in Nebraska or trips to Iowa.

The descendants of Jonas and Elizabeth Steele in Idaho and Washington would have been proud of the fact that a Steele cousin had broken out of the farmer and coal miner mold of the Virginia and Kentucky Steeles and become a doctor.

Given the number of Steeles in the extended family of the Steele-Crockett progenitors from Scotland and Ireland, it was probably inevitable that at least one Steele not only aspire to be, but strive to become and succeed in becoming, a medical doctor. And the children of doctors benefit from the improvements in educational opportunities that come with the improvements in the family's economic conditions and social class.

Dr. Steele's office

Dr. Starr Steele's office was in the Corbin Bank Building on the corner of Main and Centre Street in Corbin. The building was one of several in Corbin nominated in 1986 for inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places maintained by the National Park Service of the United States Department of Interior. The owner of the property described as "Corbin Bank Building, Main and Centre Street" was "Dr. Starr Steele, c/o Ronald Steele, 709 West Fifth, Corbin, Ky. 40701".

The 1930 census shows both the families of both Martin W. Steele and Starr E. Steele living at 709 Fifth Street in Corbin. The household includes Mark [sic = Martin] W. Steele (54), Physician, General Practice, his wife Dannie (51), Star [sic = Starr] Steele (28), Physician, Optometrist, his wife Lora (25), and their son Darrell (11/12). Martin W. Steele owns the home, valued at 3,000 dollars, and the family has a radio set.

The 1940 census shows the Starr E Steele family renting a home on Fifth Street in Corbin for 25 dollars a month. The household included Starr Steele (38), Optometrist, his wife Lora Steele (35), and their sons Darrell Steele (10) and Ronald Steele (5). In 1940, Martin W. Steele (64), Doctor, is living elsewhere in Corbin with his second wife, Elitha (31), and their son Deene R. Steele (3).

There are still, in drawers or trunks or boxes here and there, eyeglasses in cases that say "Dr. Starr Steele, optometrist -- Corbin, Kentucky".

Top  

3rd cousins X removed

Steele links with Davy Crockett

The Baldwin-Steele family descends from at least England, Scotland, Ireland, and France through several American colonies and territories including New York (NY), Massachusetts (MA), Virginia (VA), Tennessee (TN), and Kentucky (KY).

The following information is cobbled together from a number of different sources, none of them primary or even secondary. Some information appears to have originated from early European and American records before and after the founding of the United States, but nothing before the mid 19th century, and very little during the 19th century, has been confirmed by documentary evidence.

Whether there is any credibility to the received claims by some creators of

The crossings of Steele and Crockett paths from England, Scotland, Ireland, and France
1510s-1700sThe Steele path in England, Ireland, and Scotland
Generation Names of parents Born Died Affiliation
s0 Robert Steele 1510 England 1594 England England?
Ann 1510
Putative progenitor of Steele line descending to Steele-Grubb family.
Robert appears to have been English. The 16th century witnessed almost constant conflict between England and Scotland, as England sought control over Scotland.
s1 Richard Steele 1590 Ireland 1624 England?
Landers 1555 1593 Ireland?
Richard also appears to have been English. His birth and marriage in Ireland are most likely on account of his father being in the service of England in the course of its 16th-century expansion into Ireland, which was closely related to its expansion into Scotland.
s2 Sir Richard Steele 1620 England 1665-1712 England?
Unknown
Sir Richard was probably knighted on account his service to the English crown in Ireland and Scotland.
s3 Sir Parker Steele 1660 Ireland 1693-1751 Scotland England?
Cockran 1665 Scotland 1694-1759 Ireland Scotland? Ireland?
Sir Parker was probably born in Ireland while his father was there in the service of England, and later served England in Scotland.
s4 Alexander Steele 1680 Scotland 1723-1781 Scotland England? Scotland?
Hannah King 1681 England 1729 Scotland England?
Alexander was probably born in Scotland on account of his father serving there. He and his wife, apparently an English woman, seem to have been settled in Scotland.
s5 Reuben Steele 1720 Scotland c1773 At sea England? Scotland?
Reuben Steele (s5) married Hannah Watkins Crockett (c3).
See remarks on Reuben Steele's migration to America and his death at sea (s5 c3).
1620s-1670sThe Crockett path from France
c0 Gabriel Gustave de Crocketagne c1600-1620 France c1694 France France
France
Putative progenitor of collateral lines of Hannah Crockett (c3) and David Crockett (c5).
c1 Antoine de Saussure Peronette de Crocketagne 10 Jul 1643 France aft 1692 Ireland France
Louise de Saix c1648 France bef 1687 Ireland France
Common ancestors of Baldwin-Steele descendants and David Crockett.
Marriage   Antoine and Louise married about 1669 in Bordeaux in France according to some accounts.
Children   The 1st of their 8 children is said to have been born in Bordeaux on 12 October 1672, the 2nd in Kenmore Parish in Ireland on 20 November 1674, and the other 6 also in Kenmore Parish, the 8th and last on 13 April 1685.
Migration to Ireland   The dates and places of birth of the children imply that Antoine and Louise migrated from France to Ireland between 1672-1674.
Political background   The de Crocketagnes are usually said to have fled to Ireland to evade religious persecution in France. But there is no hard evidence that they were so-called Huguenots, or that religious freedom was their primary object in moving to Ireland, probably via England. The 16th and 17th centuries were rife with civil strife between Protestants and Catholics, and wars between Protestant and Catholic kings vying for control of populations in France, England, Scotland, and Ireland. Territorial ambitions were also religious, and the vanquished were often subjected to religious persecution. Yet people migrated for many reasons, including economic. By the end of the 17th century, largely Protestant England had gained a free hand in largely Catholic Ireland and Scotland. England promoted not only the exportation of Catholics from Ireland (sometimes as slaves), but also the settlement of English, Scottish, and French Protestants, and even German Protestants who had originated in Germany as refugees from France and other Catholic countries.
Name change   When and how the family name "de Crocketagne" became "Crockett" is uncertain. The "de" may have been dropped sometime before "Crocketagne" was localized (Anglicized) to "Crockett". Who initiated such changes -- members of the family or record keepers unfamiliar or impatient with French names -- is uncertain.
c2 Joseph Louis Crockett 9 Jan 1676 Ireland 1749 Virginia Virginia?
Sarah Gilbert Stewart c1680 Ireland c1776 Virginia Virginia?
Joseph Louis Crockett (c2) was David Crockett's (c5) great grandfather. His niece, Hannah Watkins Crockett (c3), married Reuben Steele (s5).
Migration   Joseph and Sarah probably migrated to New York circa 1708-1709 (see foundation for this assumption in the note on the birth of their 4th son William David (c3). The Crocketts are usually said to have migrated to the Americas to seek religious freedom. Such imputations are commonplace in romantic national and family histories. Individuals and families migrated to the New World for multiple and complex reasons, not necessarily religious.
c3 William David Crockett 10 Aug 1709 New York 1770? 1777? Tennessee? Tennessee?
Elizabeth Hedge 1730 North Carolina 1777 Tennessee? Tennessee?
Birth in New York   William was the 4th born of 11 children, 6 sons followed by 5 daughters, born to Joseph and Sarah Crockett. He is the first American born, but the only one born in New York. His older brothers were born in Ireland, and all of his younger siblings were born in Virginia. Some researchers argue that, while family tradition says he was born during the voyage from Ireland to America, he was registered as having been born in the Huguenot colony in New Rochelle in New York in 1709.
Migration   The dates and places of the births of the children suggest that the William's parents, Joseph and Sarah Crockett (c2), migrated to America around 1708-1709.
Marriage   William and Elizabeth are supposed to have married around 1748.
Death in Tennessee   William is reported to have in 1770 in what by 1777, when he is also reported to have died, had become the Western District of North Carolina, a quasi-independent entity which later became the Western District of Tennessee. In the early 1800s, it became part of Carroll County, and then became Gibson County, in Tennessee. Most accounts allege that William and Elizabeth were killed by Cherokee Indians led by is said to have died in 1777 in Tennessee.
Grave marker   A grave marker in Rogersville in Hawkins County, Tennessee, declares -- "Here lie [William] David Crockett and his wife [Elizabeth] / grandparents of Davy Crockett / who were massacred near this spot / by Indians in 1777. / Division of History, State of Tennessee / 1927".
Tennessee   William David and Elizabeth are generally said to have been the first to settle, in 1775, near what by 1785 had become Rogersville, later the county of seat of Hawkins County in Tennessee. At the time it was a contested frontier.
c4 John M. Crockett c1753 Maryland (or VA?) c1794 or aft 1802 Tennessee?
Rebecca Hawkins c1756 Maryland Tennessee?
John and Rebecca married circa 1780. They appear to have had 9 children, the 6th of whom was David "Davy" Stern Crockett (c5).
c5 David "Davy" Stern Crockett 17 Aug 1786 Franklin 6 Mar 1836 Alamo, Texas Texas?
David Crockett reportedly had 3 children with his 1st wife and 4 with his 2nd.
Franklin emerged in 1784 as a semi-independent territory in the western part of North Carolina. It made a bid for statehood in 1785, but by 1888 the control of the territory had reverted to North Carolina. It then became part of the Eastern Territory that, in 1896, was admitted to the Union as Tennessee, it's 16th state.
Republic of Texas   In 1836, revolutionary forces in Tejas, which was part of Mexico, declared the territory an independent republic following victories over the Mexican army.
Alamo   Mexican forces, attempting to reclaim the territory, surrounded and laid siege to a garrison of Texians at the Alamo mission in present-day San Antonio. All the defenders, including Crockett and several volunteers who had accompanied him to Texas, were killed in the battle, which continues to fascinate historians and capture the imagination of myth makers.
Texas   The Mexican army, though victorious at the Alamo, failed to recover Texas, and in 1845 the "Lone Star State" was annexed by the United States as its 28th state. As such it gave up its claims to territories that were later parts of Kansas (34th state, 1861), Colorado (38th state, 1876), Wyoming (44th state, 1890), Oklahoma (46th state, 1899), and New Mexico (47th state, 1912).
Affiliation   Davy Crockett was closely affiliated with Tennessee, where he served in the state legislature as well as in the House of Representatives in Congress. Disenchanted by a failure to be elected in 1834, he went to Texas in 1835, hoping to contribute to the revolution brewing there, partly in opposition to Mexico's outlawing of slavery and indent1ured servitude, which American settlers in particular favored. Though a "Texian" for less than a year, Crockett died where his heart seems to have been at the time, and his ashes and those of other defenders, cremated en masse by the Mexican army, are buried somewhere near the Alamo in an unmarked grave -- or so the story goes.
1700s-1850sThe Steele path from Steele-Crockett to Steele-Grubb
c1 Antoine de Saussure Peronette de Crocketagne 10 Jul 1643 France aft 1692 Ireland France
Louise de Saix c1648 France bef 1687 Ireland France
Common ancestors of Baldwin-Steele descendants and David Crockett.
See above (c1) for remarks about their marriage, children, migration to Ireland, political background, and name change.
c2 Robert Watkins Crockett 18 Jul 1678 Ireland 16 Nov 1746 Virginia Virginia
Rachel Elizabeth Watkins c1683 Ireland c1710 Ireland Ireland
Robert Watkins Crockett (c2) and Joseph Louis Crockett (c2) were brothers.
As such he was David Crockett's great great uncle.

Robert and Rachel were 3rd cousins. They appear to have married in 1702.
c3 Hannah Watkins Crockett 20 Jun 1705 Ireland c1800 Ireland?
s5 Reuben Steele 1720 Scotland c1770 Scotland?
Hannah Elizabeth Crockett (c3) and William David Crockett (c3) were 1st cousins.
Affiliation   The Kingdom of Scotland and the Kingdom of England (which by then included Wales) became the United Kingdom of Great Britain in 1707. Whether Reuben considered himself British, and apart from this whether he thought of himself as English or Scottish, or as Anglo-Scotch, is not clear.
Migration   Reuben reportedly arrived in Philadelphia in the early 1700s. He may have come directly from Scotland or possibly via Ireland. Hannah presumably came from Ireland with her father in the early 1700s.
Marriage   Reuben and Hannah appear to have married in Virginia around 1736.
Death   Reuben is usually reported to have died at sea. Apparently he was lost at sea on a voyage during a visit to Scotland, some reports say on the way back to America.
s6 c4 Robert "Robin" Steele 1750 Virginia 6 May 1821 Virginia Virginia
Mary "Polly" Keeling 31 Oct 1753 Virginia c1788 Virginia Virginia
Robert Steele (s6, c4) and John M. Crockett (c4) were 2nd cousins.
Affiliation   The 1st generation of American-born Steeles were Virginians as a matter of locality, but Virginia was a British-crown colony until Virginia declared its independence from Britain in 1775 -- a year after Patrick Henry, at the First Continental Congress in Philadelphia, said "I am not a Virginian but an American" (1774). It would be another year before representatives of all 13 colonies, by then at war with Great Britain, jointly signed "The unanimous Declaration of the Independence of the thirteen united States of America" (1776), another 5 years before the 13 states would ratify the "Articles of Confederation" (1777-1781), another 8 years before the formal start of the federal government of the United States of America under the Constitution (1789), by then ratified by 11 states (1787-1789), soon to be ratified by the other 2 original states (1789-1790). The history of "entity politics" is very convoluted. And matters of affiliation, whether legal (formal, authoritative) or emotional (informal, whether self-defined or socially ascribed), are even more complicated.
Virginia   Though the oldest of the 13 colonies (settled in 1607), Virginia (minus Kentucky) was the 10th entity to be admitted to the Union as a state (in 1788). When Virginia succeeded from the Union in 1861, its western counties succeeded from both Virginia and the Confederacy and incorporated themselves as West Virginia. The new entity declared itself on the side of the Union, and was admitted as the 35th state in 1863 at the height of the Civil War.
s7 c5 Samuel Steele 1775 Virginia Oct 1822 Kentucky Kentucky
Jerusha "Rusha" Powers 1780 Virginia May 1850 Kentucky Kentucky
Samuel Steele (s7, c5) and David "Davy" Stern Crockett (c5) were 3rd cousins.
Affiliation   The 2nd generation of American-born Steeles straddled Revolutionary War that resulted in the formation of the United States. However, their status as citizens of the new country derived from their status as affiliates of the Union States. State affiliations usually changed after resettlement in another state, as it does today.
Kentucky   Originally part of Virginia, Kentucky was settled in 1774, in 1775 became a contested territory, and was formally defined as a county of Virginia in 1776. It remained part of Virginia when the colony became a state in 1788, but it was separated from the state in 1789 and became the 15th state in 1792. Like Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts, it is formally a commonwealth.
Jerusha Powers appears to descend from the following families, which migrated to Massachusetts (MA) before Jonas Powers (II) migrated to Virginia.
  1. Shepard Isaac Shepard (b1571 England) and Mary (England)
  2. Deacon Ralph Shepard (bc1603 England, d1693 MA, migrated to MA before 1636) and Thanklord [Thanks, Thankes, Thankful, Thnkslord] Perkins (bc1612 England, c1681-1693 MA)
  3. Powers Trial [Tryal, Triall] Shepard (b1641 MA, dc1707-1708) and Walter Powers (bc1639 England [Ireland], dc1708 MA, migrated to MA in 1654)
  4. Jacob Powers (b1679 MA, d1768) and (2W) Edith Adams (1683-1776)
  5. Jonas Powers (I) (1719-1755/1775) and Mary Tryon (1716–1776)
  6. Jonas Powers (II) (b1742 MA, d1838 VA) and Jerusha Harmon (b1744)
  7. Steele Jerusha Powers (b1780 VA, d May 1850 Whitley KY) and Samuel Steele (b1775 VA, d Oct 1822 Whitley KY)
  8. Jonas Steele (b 18 Mar 1815 Whitley KY, d 4 Oct 1868 Whitley KY) and Elizabeth Grubb
s8 c6 Jonas Steele 18 Mar 1815 Kentucky 4 Oct 1863 Kentucky Kentucky
Elizabeth Grubb 28 Jul 1820 Virginia 2 Apr 1888 Kentucky Kentucky
Jonas Steele (s8, c6) and Davy Crockett (c5) were 3rd cousins once removed.
By this time, the Steele family is fully settled in Kentucky.
1860s-2020sThe Baldwin-Steele family and its descendants
s9 c7 Martha Ellen Steele 14 Oct 1863 Kentucky 27 Apr 1943 Idaho Idaho
Newton Bascum Baldwin 24 Dec 1862 Virginia 22 Mar 1919 Idaho Idaho
Martha Ellen (Steele) Baldwin (s9, c7) and Davy Crockett (c5) were 3rd cousins twice removed.
The Baldwins side of the family -- Newton Bascum in particular -- appears to have been the more restless side. Martha Ellen was the youngest of her Steele family.
Migration   Many Virginian farmers who migrated to Kentucky became, like many people already there, became coal miners. And for many such migrants, Kentucky was a temporary stop on a continuing quest for a better life in the newer midwest and even newer western territories and states.
s10 c8

Baldwin
sisters
1. Sada Elizabeth Williams 1883 Kentucky 1964 Idaho Idaho
2. Lydia Margaret Anstine 1 Apr 1886 Kentucky 31 Aug 1929 Nebraska Nebraska
3. Meda Jane Ure 12 Dec 1888 Kentucky Nov 1971 Washington Washington
4. Ida Mae Wetherall c Mar 1890 Kentucky 2 Apr 1923 Idaho Idaho
Ellen Baldwin's daughters (s10, c8) and Davy Crockett (c5) were 3rd cousins thrice removed.
Sada Elizabeth Williams Lydia Margaret Anstine Meda Jane Ure Ida Mae Wetherall
s11 c9

1st cousins
Faye M. Rebenstorf
Claude Jennings Williams
Velma Marie Anstine
Lennie Lee Severns
Aura Ellen Dey
Imogene Joyce LeBaron
Greta Ava Lemmer
Herbert Dale Ure
William Bascom Wetherall
Ellen Baldwin's grandchildren (s11, c9) and Davy Crockett (c5) were 3rd cousins 4 times removed.
s12 c10

2nd cousins
Marilyn Anne Disrud (Faye) Tex Lee Severns (Lennie)
Billie Rae Dorland (Lennie)
Shari (Imogene)
Debbie (Imogene)
Harlan Eugene Lemmer (Greta)
Lois Cecelia. Slater (Greta)
Douglas Ure (Dale)
Diane Richards (Dale)
Janice Christensen (Dale)
Wendy Davis (Dale)
William Owen Wetherall
Jerry Alan Wetherall
Mary Ellen Zweig
Ellen Baldwin's great grandchildren (s12, c10) and Davy Crockett (c5) are 3rd cousins 5 times removed.
s13 c11

3rd cousins
Todd Lee Disrud (Marilyn) Darci Severns (Tex)
Blake (Tex)
Paige (Billie)
Ty (Billie)
Lathan (Shari)
Brittany (Shari)
Brenda Kay (Lois)
Shelly Ann (Lois)
Bret Anthony (Lois)
Patricia Sue (Lois)
Andrew (Douglas)
David (Douglas)
Jamie (Douglas)
Terre (Diane)
Heather (Janice)
Oliver (Wendy)
Elliot (Wendy)
Gurditta (Mary Ellen)
Peter Owen (Mary Ellen)
Saori Orene (Billy)
Tsuyoshi Owen (Billy)
Ellen Baldwin's great-great grandchildren (s13, c11) and Davy Crockett (c5) are 3rd cousins 6 times removed.
s14 c12

4th cousins
Nate (Todd)
Sarah (Todd)
Dylan (Darci)
Tess (Darci)
Elise (Blake)
Michael (Patricia)
Ashley (Patricia)
Jio (Ditta)
Amrita (Ditta)
Anri (Saori)
Anoushka (Ditta)
Tatsuki (Saori)
Ellen Baldwin's great-great-great grandchildren (s14, c12) and Davy Crockett (c5) are 3rd cousins 7 times removed.
s15 c13

5th cousins
Oliver (Michael)
Ellen Baldwin's great-great-great-great grandchildren (s15, c13) and Davy Crockett (c5) are 3rd cousins 8 times removed.

Top  


The Citizen (Berea, Kentucky), 1906-1907

C.B. Moore's "Idaho letters"

William H. Baldwin and other Kentuckians in Stites

The Citizen, a newspaper published in Berea, the seat of Madison County, Kentucky, was launched on 21 June 1899 as a weekly published on Wednesday, under the banner "Devoted to the Interests of the Home, School, and Farm." From 27 September 1900 it shifted to Thursday. By the time it ran C.B. Moore's "Idaho Letter" installments, its motto had become "Devoted to the Interests of the Mountain People." Issues during the 2 years during which C.B. Moore's "Idaho Letter" series was published sold for 5 cents an issue or 1 dollar a year.

The Citizen reported in the "Eastern Kentucky" column of its 27 July 1905 edition that "C. B. Moore contemplates going to Idaho this winter" (page 8, Owsley County, Conkling). The same column somewhat differently reported that he planned to go in the fall, in the following longer remarks about Moore's activities as a teacher (page 8, Owsley County, Floyd).

C. B. Moore is planning to go to Idaho this fall, where he will make his home. He will be sorely missed by this community. -- Our free school is getting along fine with the exception that we have few books. T. P. Gabbard is our teacher. -- Letcher Gabbard, of this place, is teaching the Lower school on this creek, and boarding with C. B. Moore. He says that he has a fine school and good attendance. The students have organized a debating society. -- A large number of our boys and girls attend Sunday School. They report a fine school with C. B. Moore and Elmer Gabbard as teachers. The school has received literature that was ordered some time ago. It is a fine lot. -- We hear the C. B. Moore and Elmer Gabbard visited Miss Cort's Sunday School on Buffalo and lectured on Sunday School work.

Madison County is just to the northwest of Jackson County. The Citizen regularly reported local news and events from Madison, Jackson, Estill, Owsley, Rockcastle, and other nearby counties in a column called "Eastern Kentucky". The column accepted contributions from local people. The rules were simple. "No correspondence published unless signed in full by the writer. The name is not for publication, but as an evidence of good faith. Write plainly". Most installments of C. B. Moore's "Idaho Letter" were published in the "Eastern Kentucky" column, which often consumed the better part of a full page.

C.B. Moore's "Idaho Letter" installments

From the spring of 1906 to the spring of 1907, The Citizen published the following 5 letters posted from Stites, Idaho, by C.B. Moore, a Kentuckian from Owsley County, who was farming there with P.P. Reynolds, also from Owsley County.

C.B. Moore, "Idaho Letter", The Citizen
Letter 1. 1906-05-10, Thu, Vol. VII, No. 47, page 8, Stites, Idaho, April 27
Letter 2. 1906-06-11, Mon, Vol. VII, No. 52, page 4, Stites, Idaho, May 28
Letter 2. 1906-06-14, Thu, Vol. VII, No. 52, page 8, Stites, Idaho, May 28
Letter 3. 1906-12-20, Thu, Vol. VIII, No. 27, page 6, Stites, Idaho, Dec. 6
Letter 4. 1907-04-04, Thu, Vol. VIII, No. 42, page 8, Stites, Idaho, Mar. 19
Letter 5. 1907-05-30, Thu, Vol. VIII, No. 50, page 8, Stites, Idaho, May 15

The 2nd installment appeared at least twice, because The Citizen was "Published daily during G.A.R. Emcampment" -- refering to "the Emcampment of the Kentucky Grand Army of the Republic" in early June 1906. GAP was established in Illinois in 1866 as a fraternal organization for Civil War veterans who had served in the e Union Army, the Union Navy, the Marines, and the U.S. Revenue Cutter Service. The organization was disbanded in 1956 when its last member, born in 1850, died. Some local people celebrated the emcampment with surviving veterans in remembrance of their deceased comrades in arms. GAR is succeeded by Woman's Relief Corps (WRC), an auxillary organization established in 1883, and Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War (SUVCW), founded in 1881, is GAR's legal successor.

Transcriptions of letters

The following transcriptions were made from copies of the articles downloaded from Newspaper.com. The spelling, puncutation, and paragraphing are as received. Formating has been changed to faciliate reading on a monitor. [bracketed comments] and notes following the articles are mine.

The Idaho letters of Charles Benton "Bud" Moore (1876-1952)
From The Citizen, Berea, Kentucky, 1906-1907

Idaho Letter 1

The Citizen, Berea, Kentucky
10 May 1906, Vol. VII, No. 47, page 8
Letter dated 27 April 1906

IDAHO LETTER.

Stites, Idaho, April 27.          

To the Editor of The Citizen:

Will you give me space in your paper for a letter from a former student and reader of your most valuable paper?

My wife, family, and I started west on April 17th to find a new home and came to Lexington, Ky., where we secured our tickets to Stites, Idaho. They cost $114, and on Thursday at 2:10 p. m. we boarded the L. & N. and started on our long journey west.

We passed Frankfort and went along the beautiful Kentucky river for some distance and arrived at Louisville, Ky., at 6:50 p.m. There we changed cars for the Henderson route to St. Louis, Mo.. Crossing the Ohio river, we crossed the beautiful farming state of Indiana to the Wabash river and, after crossing that stream, we soon found ourselves speeding our way across the most magnificent state of Illinois. We arrived at St. Louis at 7:40 a. m. Friday where we changed cars for Billings, Montana, on the Burlington route.

St. Louis is a beautiful city situated in the Mississippi valley and has a magnificent depot.

We started from union depot at 8:00 a. m. Friday and, after following the Mississippi for more than fifty miles, we crossed the Missouri river. Then running along the left [west] bank of the Mississippi river for more than one hundred miles we came to the beautiful city of Hannibal, Mo. We left the Mississippi at this place on a parallel to the city of Cameron situated in the beautiful valley of the Grand river. Thence we went to St. Joseph, on the Missouri river, and, at 1 o'clock a. m. Saturday, we arrived at Lincoln, Nebraska. On the Loup river, the northern branch of the Platte river, were seen great herds of cattle feeding on grass from under the snow. After passing through the Sand Hills, which was the most desperate place I ever saw, we arrived at Alliance, which is a beautiful city situated upon a plateau in western Nebraska.

Beyond Alliance the snow was nowhere to be seen until we arrived at the Black Hills in South Dakota.

After leaving Alliance, the next town was Berea, which seemed to bring us to the remembrance of our school days at Berea, Ky.

Berea in a nice town situated in a beautiful grove of pines.

At 6:10 p. m. we arrived at Deitz, S. D., a town situated upon a plateau surrounded by beautiful scenery.

Just before we arrived at the Wyoming line we saw the mining camps of the Black Hills and at some distance could see the mountains covered with snow. We soon arrived at Toluca, Montana, where one changes cars to go to the Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.

I hope that my friends at home will be so interested in reading this as to subscribe to The Citizen to get the remainder of my journey which I will tell through the columns of your paper. The next letter will tell of our journey across the Rocky Mountains and the great prairies of the west.        Yours truly,

C. B. Moore       

Lexington, Kentucky to St. Louis, Missouri

On Louisville and Nashville Railroad

L and N Railroad Click on image to enlarge
Stretch of L&N Railroad between Lexington and Louisville, Kentucky
and Henderson route from Louisville, Kentucky to St. Louis, Missouri

From Poor's Manual of the Railroads of the United States, January 1901
Copped and cropped from Louisville and Nashville Railroad (Wikipedia)
Burlington Route Major Burlington Route lines in days of Zepher diesel locomotives
following their depression-era introduction in 1934

Copped from Texas State Historical Association

St. Louis, Missouri to Stites, Idaho

On Burlington Route and connecting lines

The following maps are crops from an extra-high-resolution scan of
Map of the Burlington Route and connections
on verso of 1907 folding guide and timetable published by
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway Company
Chicago: Poole Bros., 20 May 1907 (date on map)

The entire map can be downloaded from the
David Rumsey Map Collection
Copyright © Cartography Associates
The physical collection is housed in
the David Rumsey Map Center at
the Stanford University Library

Click on images to enlarge

Burlington Route St. Louis, Missouri to Lincoln, Nebraska on Burlington Route, 1907
Upon reaching St. Louis, Northwest-bound travelers like C.B. Moore
would route through St. Josephs and Lincoln.

Travelers bound for Kansas and points south,
including Indian Territory, and western Missouri and Arkansas,
would route through Kansas City.
Travelers bound for states west of Kansas,
including the northern parts of Colorado, Utah, Nevada, and California,
and the southern parts of Wyoming and Idaho,
would route through St. Josephs for Denver or Cheyenne.
Burlington Route Lincoln, Nebraska to Edgemont, South Dakota on Burlington Route, 1907
Notice the town of Seward 5 stops out of Lincon
on the mainline to Billings via Alliance and Edgemont

N. Bascum and M. Ellen Baldwin and their 4 daughters
lived in Lincoln around 1907 after nearby Knoxville around 1906.
Lydia, the 2nd Baldwin sister, married a man from Seward and settled there,
and Ellen, who settled in St. Maries, Idaho, visited her
on essentially the same route described by C.B. Moore.
Burlington Route Edgemont, South Dakota to Billings, Montana on Burlington Route, 1907
Note "Custer Battlefield" between Dietz in Wyoming and Topuca in Montana
Burlington Route Billings to Helena, in Montana on Burlington Route, 1907
Billings marked the start of the Northern Pacific Railroad.
An extra engine was added at Livingston for the climb through the Rockies.
Note that at Livingston, in Montana, the Yellowstone River,
flowing north from Yellowstone Park in Wyoming, turns east
toward its confluence with the Missouri River in North Dakota.
Burlington Route Helena, Montana to Spokane, Washington on Burlington Route, 1907
Spokane, Washington to Arrow (Potlatch Jct.), Idaho on Northern Pacific Railway
Arrow, Idaho to Stites, Idaho on Camus Prarie Railway along Clearwater River
Burlington engine Burlington Route locomotive and tender 2800
2-6-2 Prairie locomotive built by Baldwin
Cropped from 1907 Burlingon Route time table
Burlington engine Burlington Route locomotive and tender 2050
2-6-2 Prairie locomotive built by Baldwin
Copped from Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad (ja.wikipedia.org)
Chesapeake engine Chesapeake & Ohio locomotive and tender 1174
2-8-2 Mikado engine built in 1924 by American Locomotive
Copped from 2-8-2 Mikado (American-Rails.com)

2-6-2 Prairies

The first 2-6-2 tender locomotives in North America were built in 1900 for the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, which used them on runs across the midwestern prairies -- hence their "Prairie" nickname.

"2-6-2" -- one of several 10-wheeler (5-axel) locomotive configurations -- means 2 leading wheels, 6 coupled driving wheels, and 2 trailing wheels. The 2-6-2 and the longer 2-10-2 configurations were symetrical with respect to the number of axels. This resulted in the center of gravity falling around the middle (2nd or 3rd) driver axel. The connecting rods commonly powered the central drivers, which were coupled to the back and front drivers. This caused nosing, which was only partly countered by longer wheelbases and leading and trailing trucks.

Burlington Prairies could operate on smaller rails -- 90-pounds per yard or lighter -- hence their wide deployment on medium-duty freight and branch lines, such as across the prairies and local runs. The earlier model 2-6-2s were replaced by later models, but during the 1910s Burlington began to replace the 2-6-2 Prairies by the more stable and powerful 2-8-2 Mikado engines, and retired most of its 2-6-2s in the 1930s. However, many 2-6-2s remained in service until the end of the steam era.

Despite its flaws, "over 1,000 [2-6-2 prairies] were eventually produced in the United States (and over 1,700 worldwide), [and] nearly half of these . . . were used on the CB&Q." Roughly 95 can be found in railway museums today, and as many as 15 remain operational.

Paraphrased by Wetherall from 2-6-2 (American-Rails.com)

2-8-2 Mikados

"Mikado" means "emperor" in Japanese, and 2-8-2 configuration locomotives were so named in honor of Emperor Meiji (1852-1912, r1868-1912), because Baldwin built the first fleet of such engines for Japan in 1890.

Over 11,000 Mikados of various designs were built by different companies in America, and they became the country's most widely used locomotive. During the Pacific War, some operators called them "MacArthurs".

Paraphrased by Wetherall from 2-8-2 Mikado (American-Rails.com)

North Pacific engine North Pacific Railroad, tender locomotive 673, Lewiston, 1900
A Bachmann 4–4-0 arriving at Lewiston from Spokane
via Pullman, Moscow, and Julietta (Potlatch Jct., Arrow)
Photo copped and cropped from Lewiston Tribune
Stites NPRR Northern Pacific Railroad terminal at Stites, Idaho, circa 1909
Postcard image copped from Laurie Chapman
Stites mainstreet Main street of Stites, Idaho, circa 1902
Postcard image copped from University of Idaho Library
Northern Pacific
North Pacific
North Pacific
Nez Perce Reservation

The above map reflects conditions between
1895 when the reservation was opened and
1911 when Lewis County was established

The red and green markings were added by this writer (WOW)
The red border marks the limits of the Nez Perce Reservation
when opened for homesteading in 1895

This writer's mother was born and raised on Central Ridge
where her paternal and maternal grandparents homesteaded
Their postal address was Steele until they moved to Peck

Map copped and cropped from University of Idaho Library Digital Initiative Special Collections
PG 6183 (MG 183) - Hal Riegger CPRR Collection
Map 1; Map of Hitman, Latah, Nez Perces, Garfield and Asotin
Note postal town of "Steele" on Central Ridge between 36 and 35

Idaho Letter
Idaho Letter

The L&N Railroad -- aka "Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company" -- was chartered in 1850.

Henderson route refers to the Louisville, Henderson, & St. Louis Railway, which was chartered in 1882 but became a subsidiary of the L&N in 1905, the year before C.B. Moore's journey west.

Burlington route refers to any number of routes on the Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy Railroad, which was chartered in 1846 to connect Chicago with towns to the west, south, and southwest, and later to the north and northwest. Burlington routes became arteries and veins of especially the Midwest states, ultimately connecting them, and with the Rockies in Denver, Colorado and Billings, Montana.

Source: University of Louisville, University Libraries, Railroad Collections: Railroad Company Records

Idaho Letter 2

The Citizen, Berea, Kentucky
11 June 1906, Vol. VII, No. 52, page 4
14 June 1906, Vol. VII, No. 52, page 8
Letter dated 28 May 1906

IDAHO LETTER.

Stites, Idaho. May 28.          

To the Editor of The Citizen:

Allow me to go back a few miles from Toluca, the place where I left off in my last letter, and give the reader an idea of Custer's last battle ground in Montana. It lies a few hundred yards from the railroad on the north side and between the Big Horn and Rosebud rivers. There are monuments marking the last resting place of General Custer and his men.

Our arrival at Billings, Montana, at 10:40 brought us to the Northern Pacific Railroad, which we traveled parallel to the Yellowstone river for a distance of 123 miles, passing some of the picturesque scenery of Montana.

We arrived at Livingston, Mont., at 2:45 p. m. this town is situated on the Yellowstone river, and, traveling east one would change cars to the Yellowstone National Park, Wy. Here is the finest depot west of St. Paul. Here was attached an extra engine to carry us across the Rockies. After crossing a portion of the mountains, we came to the Butte tunnel, which is more than two miles long, by which we passed under the main range of the Rockies. At this point the mountains are over 12,000 feet high. At 7 p. m. we were on the summit of the highest mountain and the sun was shining bright and throwing its rays of light on the snow caps, presenting the most wonderful view. The sun was hidden view at 8:10 p.m., by eastern time, and it became dark. Then we came to Silver Bow river, named by two miners or prospectors on seeing the sun's light upon it at an early hour in the morning. At 2:20 a. m. Sunday, we crossed the Coeur D'Alene Mountains. Here we entered North Idaho, and, traveling for quite a distance, we came to the beautiful Pond d'Oreille Lake which is the finest body of water I ever saw. It is situated between two large mountains which run down to the water's edge. It is more than five miles wide and thirty-five miles long and is noted for its fine fish.

Now allow me to give you an idea of the prairies of the northwest. After leaving this most magnificent lake, we found we were going on a parallel line across Idaho, which is a plateau country more than 1,000 feet high and, looking over its vast plain, one could see great herds of cattle feeding on prairie grass. Scarcely any timber could be seen, only as you glanced to east, in the direction of the main range of the Rockies. We arrived at Spokane, Wash., at 10:10 p. m. Monday, where we change trains for Potlatch Jct, Idaho. Spokane is a beautiful city, situated upon a vast plateau, and more than 12,000 feet high. It is the center of trade in eastern Washington. This city has fine water power.

We arrived at Potlatch Jct. at 3:15 and changed cars for Stites, Idaho. Passing some of the great cannons [sic = canyons] of Idaho, we arrived at Stites at 6:40 p. m. Monday. This ended our journey, and after meeting with our friends and having a hearty hand shake, we felt at home once more.

I will stop here for the present and will in my next letter give a description of what I have seen and heard of Idaho.        Yours truly,

C. B. Moore       

Spokane, in Washington, was where the Baldwin-Steele family of N. Bascum Baldwin and M. Ellen Steele lived with their youngest daughters Meda and Ida in 1908 and 1909, before moving to and settling in St. Maries, in Idaho. St. Maries is due east of Spokane and south of Coeur D'Alene, in Idaho, where the only descendants of the oldest Baldwin-Steele sister, Sadie Baldwin, settled and still reside.

Potlatch Jct. was the name of the junction of an N.P.R.R. line from Spokane through Pullman and Moscow, and an N.P.R.R. line from Lewiston to Stites. The junction was later named Arrow after the town that became associated with the junction, which is at the confluence of the Potlatch and Clearwater rivers.

gibbs_1863

Potlatch
The word "potlatch" is so-called "Chinook jargon" for a ceremony among some Northwest American tribes that involved a feast and an exchange of gifts. Extended meanings include a "potluck dinner" and the act of giving away one's personal items to friends. See Chinook jargon on the Nez Perce page of this website for details.

Potlatch is today an incoporated town northeast of Moscow in Latah County, Idaho. It was developed in the early 1900s as the company town of the Potlatch Lumber Company, The mill, which began operating in 1906, closed in 1981. For a while, it was the largest white-pine mill in the world. The Potlatch company dominated logging and milling operations in forests north of the east-west run of the Clearwater from Orofino to Lewiston.

Headquarters, another Potlatch company town, in Clearwater County to the east of Latah County, became the terminal of the 4th Subdivision of the Camas Prairie Railroad. The 4th Sub plied between Orofino and Headquarters, so named by the company because the main offices for its logging operations in the region, and the main railroad yard and engine barns for regional logging trains, were located there. I lived in Headquarters for a week or so during the summer of 1948, with my maternal aunt, whose husband was a logger for the company, and I rode on one of the newer diesel engines around one of the logging loops. See Headquarters on the Trains page of this website for other details and photographs.

Stites was the terminal station, completed in 1900, of the branch of the Northern Pacific Railroad that originated in Lewiston, at the confluence of the Clearwater River with the Snake River. The town was named after Jacob Stites, who homesteaded the site in 1897 after the U.S. government opened parts of the Nez Perce Reservation to non-Nez Perce homesteaders.

Stites and Clearwater River
Stites is on the south fork of the Clearwater River, upstream (south) of Kooskia (KOO skii), which is at the confluence of the larger middle and smaller south forks of the Clearwater. Together they form the main (south) fork of the river.

From Kooskia, the Clearwater continues north to Kamiah (KAA-me-eye), where it picks up Lawyer Creek, and through several other towns at confluences of other tributary creeks. It is fed by Orofino Creek at Orofino, where it turns west toward Lewiston. On its way to Lewiston, the Clearwater receives several other streams, including the north fork of the river at Ahsahka, Big Canyon Creek at Peck, and the Potlatch River at Arrow. At Lewiston it joins the Snake River, which joins the Columbia, which spills into the Pacific Ocean.

Lewiston-Stites branch of N.P.R.R.
The N.P.R.R. tracks and first few stations between Lewiston and Stites were constructed in 1899-1900. In 1928, the line became the 1st Subdivision of the Camus Prairie Railroad (C.P.R.R.). The Camus Prairie's passenger service ended in 1955. See Camus Prairie on the Trains page of this website for other details and photographs.

I rode trains on this line as late as 1948 from Lewiston to Peck, upstream from Arrow, before Orofino, where the river and the tracks veer south toward Kamiah, Kooskia, and Stites, My mother, Louida Orene (Hardman) Wetherall (1913-2003), was born and raised on a homestead on Central Ridge, above Peck, and she was partly raised in Peck. My maternal Hardman grandparents lived in Peck until late 1948, and I stayed with them several times during summer visits. See Central Ridge ranch and following sections on the 3. Hardman-Hunter and related families for details about the Hardman and Hunter homesteads on Central Ridge.

Idaho Letter 3

The Citizen, Berea, Kentucky
20 December 1906, Vol. VIII, No. 27, page 6
Letter dated 6 December 1906

IDAHO LETTER.

Stites, Idaho. Dec. 6.          

Editor of The Citizen: -- We are having winter at present; the ground has been covered with snow for some three weeks.

Stites is our principal town and is the center of trade in northern Idaho. It is situated on the south fork of Clearwater River, having a population of about 500 inhabitants.

This town was first started in the year of 1900, and now has three dry goods stores, one hardware store, two drug stores, one harness shop, one deposit bank, four hotels, three livery stables, one printing office, two churches, two doctors, two saloons, and four large warehouses.

It was named in honor of Mr. Jacob Stites, who owned the land at the time of the founding of the town. This is the end of the N. P. R. R., which runs from Lewiston, Idaho, to Stites daily, except Sunday, and the only railroad in the range of the Bitter Root Mountains. It has four stage lines, one running to Harpeter a distance of ten miles; one running to Grangeville, county seat of Idaho county, a distance of 20 miles, one to Elk City, a distance of 54 miles; one to Buffalo Hump, a gold mining town, a distance of 90 miles.

A. M. Reynolds is employed as a clerk for the N. P. R. R. at a salary of $110.00 a month.

P. P. Reynolds and C. B. Moore have three hundred acres of fine timber land.

This is a fine country for raising potatoes. I have raised 250 bushels of spuds and stored them away in gunny sacks, and have been offered six bits [75 cents] a sack for them, and that's a lead pipe cinch [a sure (easy) deal], is the expression you often hear used here.

We were surprised as well as pleased to see in your valuable paper, where J. W. Baker of Ricetown, Ky., had won the affection of his fourth Sally. It reminds me of this poetry:

A poet would praise her saucy ways
So winsome and so airy,
Her form's sweet mold, her hair's red gold,
Her eyes -- the teasing fairy.

No poet am I but shall I sigh?
Her heart is so contrary,
She'll have me say -- no other way --
She's just my fourth dear Sarah.

When I first came to this country I was surprised as well as pleased to meet Levi Hacker, a brother of Pete Hacker of Cow Creek, Ky., the famous mule dealer, and to learn that he was in the stock business too, but he deals in Cayuses [Indian (Cayuse, Nez Perce) ponies] instead of mules.

John Baldwin, better known as Levi, has his new dwelling house almost completed.

An invitation was sent out by J. P. Reynolds and wife to their family and a few special friends to enjoy a splendid Thanksgiving dinner, which consisted of roasted pig and turkey, mince and pumpkin pies, cakes, jellies, grapes, nuts and fruits of all kinds that would be pleasing to the taste of the royal family of England.

We've worked and toiled thru heat and cold,
To plant, to sow, to reap:
And now, for all this bounteous store,
Let us Thanksgiving keep.

Good luck for The Citizen and its many readers.

Yours truly,                     
C. B. MOORE       

A. M. Reynolds is Albert Maywood Reynolds (1879-1958), C.B. Moore's brother in law.

P. P. Reynolds is Pleasant Perry Reynolds (c1848-1923), C.B. Moore's father-in-law.

The Moore and Reynolds families were from Cow Creek in Owsley County, which is just to the east of Jackson County.

N.P.R.R. -- Northern Pacific Railway -- at times included the Camus Prairie Railroad (C.P.R.R.), a branch of which plied the banks of the Clearwater River between Lewiston and Stites.

Peck and Orofino
Midway on the Lewiston-Stites branch of the C.P.R.R. were stations at Peck, then Orofino just upstream from Peck. Peck, in Nez Perce County like Lewiston, was the village where my mother went to high school after my maternal Hardman-Hunter grandparents left their homestead on Nez Perce Reservation land on Central Ridge above Peck.

Orofino, just upstream from the confluence of the north and main (south) forks of the Clearwater River, is

  1. the home of the Idaho State Asylum where my paternal grandmother Ida Mae (Baldwin) Wetherall (1890-1923), and later her 1st cousin Samuel Berten Baldwin (1892-1930), passed away,
  2. where my mother Louida Orene (Hardman) Wetherall (1913-2003) taught high school before marrying my father,
  3. where my father William Bascom Wetherall (1911-2013) got his first job as the deputy prosecutor for Clearwater County after graduating from law school,
  4. and where years later Haruo Aoki, my Japanese language teacher at Berkeley, began his Nez Perce language fieldwork, at the home of the former county prosecutor for whom my father worked and where he lived for a while after finishing law school.

A poet would praise her saucy ways

This is a slightly saucier version of a poem titled "Mary" by Catherine Young Glen in the November 1895 (Volume XIV, Number 2) issue (page 158) of Munsey's Magazine.

          MY MARY.

A BARD would praise her saucy ways,
     So winsome and so airy,
Her form's sweet mold, her hair's red gold,
     Her eyes -- the teasing fairy!

No bard am I, but shall I sigh?
     Her heart is so contrary,
She'll have me say -- no other way --
     She's "just my own dear Mary!"

               Catharine Young Glen

Catherine Young Glen, aka C. Y. Glen, also wrote song lyrics.

Munsey's Magazine was then a monthly published in New York by Frank A. Munsey. The 12 issues of Volume XIV, totalling 762 pages, were stuffed with special articles, short stories, serial stories, poems, and departments.

The magazine's circulation in 1895 was around 500,000 copies. The circulation reached about 700,000 in 1897 but began to fall in 1906, was down to 60,000 by 1920, and merged with Argosy for a while in 1929.

We've worked and toiled thru heat and cold

These lines are from the "Second Child" stanza of "The Feast Time of Year" by Dora Reed [sic = Read] Goodale (pages 88-90).

Second Child

Harvest is come. The bins are full,
    The barns are running o'er;
Both grains and fruits we've garnered in
    Till we've no space for more.

We've worked and toiled through heat and cold,
    To plant, to sow, to reap;
And now for all this bounteous store
    Let us Thanksgiving keep.

The poem is presented in the form of a script for a drama in which each of 5 children recite lines of thanks, after which all five children join hands and recite some lines -- after which, as they exit, a small boy is said to look at them, then follow them and join them in reciting thanks.

The poem is published as "Recitation XIII -- Quotations: "The Feast Time of the Year." By Five Children, in Werner's Readings and Citations, No. 40, Thanksgiving Celebrations, Compiled and Arranged by Stanley Schell, New York: Edgar S. Werner & Co., 1907, pages 88-90.

Dora Read Goodale (1866–1953) was the younger of the Goodale sisters, both of whom were poets. Her sister, Elaine Goodale Eastman (1863–1953), was better known as a teacher of and publicist for Indians in the Dakotas. In 1891, Elaine married Charles Alexander Eastman (1858-1939), a Santee Dakota (Sioux) first named Hakadah then Ohiye S'a. He graduated from Boston University in 1889 and became the first Native American medical-school trained physician. Elaine helped Charles publish stories about his childhood and life.

Idaho Letter 4

The Citizen, Berea, Kentucky
4 April 1907, Vol. VIII, No. 42, page 8
Letter dated 19 March 1907

IDAHO LETTER.

Stites, Idaho, Mar.19.          

To The Citizen -- We are having nice weather and the thirty inch snow is almost gone. The people are beginning to plow. -- We've had more now this winter since the year 1887. -- Stites has just finished one of the finest hotels in the west costing about $10,000. -- We are having muddy roads in in this part of the county now, caused by the recent thaw and so much freighting. There has been more than 5,000 head of cattle, 20,000 sheep, and 30,000 hogs shipped from Stites since November 1st, 1906. -- The hunters from the mountains are bringing to Stites the hides off their game, consisting of huge black bear, caugar [sic = cougar] and deer. -- The deep snow in the mountains has caused some of the deer to come down among the settlers and they are having great sport chasing them. -- P. P. Reynolds is planning to build on the west end of his ranch in order to get the use of a fine spring. -- C. B. Moore has his cistern nearly completed. -- William Baldwin, a former Kentuckian, had a bad accident a few days ago. He got his house and everything burned down and he and his family went to the house of his son in their night clothes in a fifteen-inch snow. -- The Citizen is a welcome visitor in our home, and our neighbors are as anxious to read it as we are, and when asked to subscribe for it, say: "What use of of buying a cow when you are getting milk, We are always glad to read the good news where Kentucky is getting rid of the man killer, whisky, and wish to add that a man living on the prairies or plains of the west may have greater advantages to get rich but whenever whiskey is voted out of Kentucky the feudism of the mountains will stop, and peace and happiness will be found in every home. I would advise Mrs. Yocum's plan of organizing a Citizens' League. We are We are anxious to hear of that much being done by the good and loyal citizens of Eastern Kentucky.

/ I am their friend,                     
C. B. MOORE       

William Baldwin is undoubtedly William Henley Baldwin (1856-1937), John R. Baldwin's 4th child, 2nd son, and his 1st child and son with Margaret Howard.

Idaho Letter 5

The Citizen, Berea, Kentucky
30 May 1907, Vol. VIII, No. 50, page 8
Letter dated 15 May 1907

IDAHO LETTER.

Stites, Idaho, May 15.          

To the Editor of The Citizen: -- We are having Beautiful weather, and the farmers and gardeners are making good use of the time. -- The new road running across the east end of C. B. Moore's ranch, thru the west end of P. P. Reynold's ranch is now completed. -- The public roads are in good condition since the dry weather has begun. -- P. P. Reynolds and C. B. Moore have planted 964 pounds of potatoes. P. P. Reynolds has sowed 3/4 pound of onion seeds which will make 30 bushels. -- Mr. A. M. Reynolds is still working for N. P. R. R. Co. at a good salary. -- Jas. H. Dunn says that he raised seven tons of oat hay on one acre of ground, which was twice as much as any other farmer ever raised. He wants to sell his ranch. -- John Baldwin nays that he has the finest ranch on the slope which he will sell for $3,000. -- Little Earnest C. and Martha M. Moore say they are going back to "Tucky" in a few years to see grandma. -- We were worry to hear of the death of our friend, Clay Treadway of Owsley county, and also the death of A. M. Neely, sheriff of Owsley. -- There have been only three deaths in and around Stites since we have been here. One was caused by a rattle snake bite. -- We receive letters from our Kentucky friends asking why we don't write oftener to you paper. Can say that we are quite a while in getting items interets [sic = interest], as our people in this part of the country are all strangers to the readers of your paper. -- James H. Dunn has the largest family in Idaho county, numbering 17. He is 38 years old and has been married 20 years. -- If any of our friends are very anxious to know about this country and will write to me, I will gladly give any information possible. -- P. P. Reynolds and C. B. Moore are planning to take a trip into the mountains. We hope to give an interesting letter to the readers of your paper on our return. -- C. B. Moore found a grapeshot, that weighed about 10 ounces, which was, perhaps, used in a battle fought near Stites on the 10th of May,1881, between the Nez Perce Indians and General O. O. Howard. Perhaps some of the readers of The Citizen remember General Howard, who visited Berea College in 1897. -- Some of our eastern friends have an idea that the only thing to do to get rich and live easy is to come west. But remember this little verse applies to the western man as well as the eastern.

"The man who simply sits an' waits
    For good to come along
Ain't worth the breath that one would take
    To tell him he is wrong
Fur good ain't flowin' around this world
    Fur ev'ry fool to sup;
You've got to put your see'ers on
    An' go an' hunt it up.

Yours truly,                     
C. B. MOORE       

Little Earnest C. and Martha M. Moore were C.B. Moore's children Ernest Clarence Moore (1901-1972) and Martha Margaret (Moore) Dodson (1904-1994). Their mother was Nancy "Nannie" Moore (1876), who was P.P. Reynolds' daughter and A.M. Reynolds' sister.

the 10th of May,1881 makes no sense. The so-called "Nez Perce War" consisted of a series of skirmishes and battles fought between late Spring 1877 in Idaho and early fall 1877 in Montana. The war essentially started in May 1877 when U.S. Army General Oliver Otis Howard (1830-1909) ordered both treaty and non-treaty Nez Perce bands to move to the so-called "Nez Perce Reservation" within 30 days. The reservation, as defined in 1863, was a radical reduction to only about 10 percent of the original reservation defined by a 1855 treaty, which recognized most of what the Nez Perce regarded as their ancestral lands. In every respect, the 1863 treaty typified the ways in which the United States government sided with movements among white settler to deprive Native Americans of their ancestral lands, in this case following a gold rush. In June 1877, shortly before the deadline, some members of a non-treaty band opted to even some old grudges in the name of defending their ancestral lands from further encroachment. At the same time, Howard's forces were building up in ancipation of having to physically enforce the removal order. On 17 June 1877, Nez Perce bands defeated soldiers sent to capture them in White Bird Canyon, southwest of what later became Grangeville, which is southwest of what later became Stites. Some treaty bands, including a few that would have been willing to abide by the removal orders if they had had more time, but knowing that negotiations would now be fruitless, joined the non-treaty bands on a fighting retreat to Canada, evading Howard's pursuing forces, winning some battles, losing others along the way, but generally out maneuvering Howard. Then forces led by General Nelson Appleton Miles (1839–1925), who was based in Yellowstone, intercepted the main Nez Perce party encamped at Bear Paw, only a day or two before it would have reached Canada, and engaged them in battle. Howard's forces caught up with the embattled party at a point when the fighting had stalemated, and survivors of the party, led by Chief Joseph, surrendered on 5 October 1877.

General O. O. Howard was running the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1881. Shortly before the Nez Perce War, he was the dean of Howard College, which was charted in 1867 with his help and named after him. He was then the head of the Freedman's Bureau, which was established in 1865, after the Civil War, to facilitate the needs of freed slaves. He served as Howard University's 3rd president in 1869–1874.

Nez Perce Indians were so named by French Canadian explorers, according to an 1810 journal written in English. But William Clark is said to have used the term "Chopunnish" in 1805, and Meriwether Lewis reportedly noted that "The orniments worn by the Chopunnish are, in their nose a single shell of Wampom, the pirl and beeds are suspended from the ears." Aoki thinks that "Chopunnish" may be an Anglicization of "c'ú-pʔnit" in which Lewis represented "-t" with the English national suffix "-sh" in words like "British, Irish, Scottish, Turkish, Spanish, and so on." He avers that "If this proposed etymology is correct" -- and he suspects it is "because many instances of Chopunnish [in English reports] are immmediately followed by the phrase 'or pierced noses'" -- then "the oldest [Native American] name for Nez Perce meant 'nez percé'" (Haruo Aoki, Nez Perce Grammar, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1973, pages 1-3). Aoki notes that they called themselves "/nimí·pu·/", which breaks down into "real" or "we" (nun, numi, nimi) and "people" (pu), hence something like "we, the people". Aoki has also suggested that "nimipu" could mean "the walking people" (Haruo Aoki, Nez Perce Dictionary, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994). Aoki taught me Japanese at Berkeley in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

The "Nez Perce Tribe" page of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission website flatly denies that Nez Perce pierced their noses.

The Nez Perce call themselves Niimíipuu -- "The People." The name nez percé ("pierced nose") came from French Canadian fur traders in the 18th century, an erroneous identification as nose piercing was never practiced by the tribe.

The Nez Perce Indian Fact Sheet ("Nez Perce Tribe") page on the "Native American Facts for Kids" website allows that some Nez Perce may in fact have pierced their nose.

How do you pronounce the word "Nez Perce"? What does it mean?
Nez Perce is is pronounced "nezz purse" in English. It comes from the French name for the tribe, Nez Percé (pronounced nay per-say.) Nobody knows why the French called them this. It means "pierced nose," but the Nez Perce people say that unlike some neighboring tribes, they have never had a tribal tradition of pierced noses. Maybe the French confused the Nez Perce with another tribe, or maybe there was once a Nez Perce band or individual who had nose piercings. The Nez Perce name for themselves is Nimipu, which means "the people."

Such problems of description typically arise when attempting to generalize about any behavior within any group of more than a few people. In any sizeable group, behaviors vary individually, and rarely do all members of a group behave the same way. Practically all "superlatives" of the "They are X" or "They never do Y" variety are false. Very rarely are "they" so uniform, or do "they" act so uniformly, as to warrant such one-size-fits-all, paint-them-all-the same characterization.

The Nez Perce Tribe, based in Lapwai, in Nez Perce County, Idaho, refers to Nez Perce people and the Nez Perce language as "Niimiipuu" and "Nimiipuutimpt" on its homepage (www.nezperce.org. Some other websites represent these terms as "Niimíipuu" and "Niimíipuutimpt". The latter term is sometimes shown as "Niimiipuu'timpt" or even "Niimiipuu timpt" in order to offset "timpt" meaning "language"

The Nez Perce are thought to have lived on the Columbia plateau, between the Sierra Nevada–Cascade Mountains to the west and the Rocky Mountains to the east, in what is today the tri-state region of southeast Washington, northeast Oregon, and the western part of central Idaho, for about 11,000 years before the arrival of European-ancestry adventurers in the late 18th century. A treaty with the United States Government in 1855 defined a Nez Perce reservation that included practically all of the territory the various Nez Perce bands regarded as their ancestral land. By 1863, the ancestral lands had been reduced by 90 percent to a mere postage-stamp territory that maps today still delimit as the "Nez Perce Reservation", which included the main forks of the Clearwater river with the north and east borders, est of the main forks of the . The reservation, which centers on the Clearwater River, overlaps parts of the following 4 western central Idaho counties.

Nez Perce Reservation counties
Ordered by percent of reservation area
Nez Perce government at Lapwai
County      County seat   Other towns of interest
Nez Perce   Lewiston      Peck, Lapwai, Culdesac
Lewis       Nezperce      Kamiah, Whitebird
Idaho       Grangeville   Kooskia, Stites, Clearwater
Clearwater  Orofino       Pierce, Headquarters

"The man who simply sits an' waits" is by Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872-1906). Dunbar was born in Dayton, Ohio, to parents who had been slaves in Kentucky. His mother was emancipated before the civil war, and father escaped slavery during the war and served in the 55th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, a black Union infantry unit. Ohio shares most of its southern border with eastern Kentucky, along the Ohio river. Dunbar was well enough known as a poet and writer for C.B. Moore to have heard of the poem he cites. Dunbar died of tuberculosis on 9 February 1906, a couple of months before Moore wrote his first Idaho letter. Some versions of the poem are slightly different -- such as "sets and" rather than "sits an'" in the first line.

Top  

Kentucky-Idaho itinerary via northern route

Compiled from C.B. Moore's letters by William Wetherall

The Moore family began their trek to the northwest on Thursday, 17 April 1906, along the following course.

1st letter
Thursday, 17 April
    2:10 p.m. Boarded the L&N (Louisville and Nashville) in Lexington, Kentucky.
        Passed Frankfort and went along the Kentucky river.
    6:50 p.m. Arrived at Louisville, Kentucky.
        Changed trains for the Henderson route to St. Louis, Missouri.
        Crossed the Ohio river, passed through Indiana, and crossed the Wabash river.
Friday, 18 April
    7:40 a.m. Arrived at St. Louis, Missouri.
        Changed trains for Billings, Montana, on the Burlington route.
    8:00 a.m. Started from Union Depot.
        Followed the Mississippi river for more than 50 miles.
        Crossed the Missouri river.
        Ran north along the west bank of the Mississippi river for more than 100 miles.
        Came to the city of Hannibal, Missouri.
        Left the Mississippi on a parallel to the city of Cameron in the Grand River valley.
        Thence to St. Joseph on the Missouri river.
Saturday, 19 April
    1:00 a.m. Arrived at Lincoln, Nebraska.
        On the Loup river, the northern branch of the Platte river,
            saw great herds of cattle feeding on grass under the snow.
        Passed through the Sand Hills.
            "the most desperate place I ever saw".
        Arrived at Alliance
            "a beautiful city" on a plateau in western Nebraska.
            Beyond Alliance "snow . . . nowhere to be seen
            until . . . the Black Hills in South Dakota."
        After leaving Alliance, the next town was Berea.
            "remembrance of our school days at Berea, Ky."
    6:10 p.m. Arrived at Deitz, South Dakota.
        Just before the Wyoming line we saw the mining camps of the Black Hills
            and at some distance we could see the mountains covered with snow.
        We soon arrived at Toluca, Montana
            where one changes cars for Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming.
2nd letter
        Custer's last battle ground in Montana lies a few hundred yards from the railroad
            on the north side of Toluca, between the Big Horn and Rosebud rivers.
            Monuments mark the last resting place of General Custer and his men.
[ Saturday, 19 April ]
  10:40 [a.m.] Arrived at Billings, Montana.
        Traveled the Northern Pacific Railroad
            parallel to the Yellowstone river for a distance of 123 miles.
    2:45 p.m. Arrived at Livingston, Montana, on the Yellowstone river.
        If traveling east one would change cars here to the Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming.
        "Here is the finest depot west of St. Paul."
        An extra engine was attached to carry us across the Rockies.
        After crossing a portion of the mountains we came to the Butte tunnel,
            which is more than two miles long and passes under the main range of the Rockies.
            The mountains at this point are over 12,000 feet high.
    7 p.m. We are on the summit of the highest mountain.
        "the sun was shining bright and throwing its rays of light on the snow caps."
    8:10 p.m., by eastern time, the sun was hidden and it became dark.
        Came to Silver Bow river, named by two miners or prospectors
            on seeing the sun's light on it at an early hour in the morning.
Sunday, 20 April
    2:20 a.m. Crossed the Coeur D'Alene Mountains where we entered North Idaho.
        Traveling for quite a distance we came to the beautiful Pond d'Oreille Lake
            "the finest body of water I ever saw"
            between two large mountains which run down to the water's edge.
            It is more than 5 miles wide and 35 miles long and is noted for its fine fish.
        The prairies of the northwest
        "After leaving this most magnificent lake,
            we found we were going on a parallel line across Idaho,
            which is a plateau country more than 1,000 feet high
            and, looking over its vast plain, one could see
            great herds of cattle feeding on prairie grass.
            Scarcely any timber could be seen, only as you glanced to east,
            in the direction of the main range of the Rockies."
Monday, 21 April
    10:10 p. m. Arrived at Spokane, Washington.
        Changed trains for Potlatch Jct, Idaho.
            "Spokane is a beautiful city, situated upon a vast plateau,
            and more than 12,000 feet high.
            It is the center of trade in eastern Washington.
            This city has fine water power."
    3:15 [p.m.] Arrived at Potlatch Jct.
        Changed cars for Stites, Idaho.
    6:40 p. m. Arrived at Stites
        after passing some of the great canyons of Idaho.
            "This ended our journey, and after meeting with our friends
            and having a hearty hand shake, we felt at home once more."

Top  


Dramatis personae

Who were C.B. Moore, Earnest C. and Martha M. Moore, and A.M. and P.P. Reynolds -- among others who appear in the Idaho letters?

The following extracts from census and other records dramatize the extent to these members of the Moore and Reynolds families moved around,

  1. The 1880 census for Cow Creek in Owsley County, Kentucky, shows Charles B. 4 as a son of Andrew J. Moore 36 and Margaret 31. Andrew J. was known as "Jackson". Margaret's natal family name was Gabbard.
  2. The 1900 census for Cow Creek in Owsley County, Kentucky, shows Charles B. Moore, age 23, born July 1876, a farmer, with his wife Nancie [Nannie?] age 24, born May 1876, with a younger brother, his mother, and a younger sister.
  3. The 1910 census for Stites in Idaho County, Idaho, shows Charles B. Moore 34, farming on a general farm, with his wife Nancie [Nannie?] J. 34, son Ernest C. 9, and daughter Martha M. 4 -- all Kentucky-born to Kentucky-born parents. The Moore's had been married for 10 years.
  4. The 1920 census shows the same family -- Charlie B. Moore 43, Nannie 43, Earnest 18, Martha 15, living in Beat 5 precinct in Lee County, Mississippi -- all Kentucky-born to Kentucky-born parents. Charlie B. is farming on a general farm, and Earnest is working as a farm laborer on a home farm -- most likely his father's.
    1. C.B. Moore's father-in-law, P.P. Reynolds, died on 20 June 1923 in Fergus, Montana. He was born Pleasant Perry Reynolds in Owsley County, Kentucky about 1849. The 1900 census shows him residing in Berea in Madison county, Kentucky. He was in Stites, Idaho, with C.B. Moore in 1906 and 1907, but had moved to Montana by the 1910 census. He was still farming in Montana in the 1920 census.
  5. On 30 March 1929, Martha Margaret Moore married James M. Dodson in Jefferson County, Alabama.
  6. The 1930 census for Birmingham in Jefferson County, Alabama, shows Charley B. Moore 53, as a salesman in a furniture store, with his wife Macy J. 53, their daughter Martha Dodson 25, and a granddaughter Motley Eric 4. All are Kentucky-born except Motley Eric, who was born in Mississippi.
    1. Nannie Moore, nee Reynolds, born in Kentucky on 14 May 1876, died on 29 June 1931 in Ensley, Jefferson County, Alabama, and was buried on 1 July 1931 in Elmwood. She was the daughter of Pleasant P. Reynolds and Martha J. according to the 1880 census for Cow Creek.
  7. The 1940 census shows Charles B. Moore, 63, again farming on a farm, in Hickmans, in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, but widowed, with his daughter Martha Dodson, 35, also widowed, and his granddaughter, Eris Whatley, 14. Their completed levels of education are respectively C-1, H-2, and 8. Charles B. and Martha are said to have been born in Alabama while Eris was born in Mississippi. In 1935, the family was living in Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama.
    1. Charles B. Moore, born in Kentucky on 22 July 1876, died in on 10 October 1952 in Tuscaloosa County, Alabama, and is buried in Tuscaloosa Memorial Park in Tuscaloosa in Tuscaloosa County.
    2. C.B. Moore's brother-in-law A.M. Reynolds -- born Albert Maywood Reynolds about 1879 in Owsley County -- died on 6 August 1958 in Benton in Kennewick County in Washington, and he is buried in Desert Lawn Memorial Park in the same town. A.M. Reynolds stayed in the same area of Idaho for a while, The 1920 census shows him living in White Bird, Idaho County, Idaho, where on 5 January 1922 he was appointed the postmaster. By the 1930 census he was in Grangeville, in Idaho County, Idaho. The 1940 census shows him working as a hired hand -- a sheep herder -- in Lucile in Idaho County, Idaho -- age 55, C2 education. He was boarding on a sheep camp with 9 others, mostly herders -- one of whom had an H4 education, all others 8 or 6 years.
    3. Ernest Clarence Moore, born in Cow Creek on 1 July 1901, died on 24 September 1972 in Valparaiso in Porter County, Indiana, and is buried in Calvary Cemetery in Portage in the same county with his wife Anna (1905–2007).
    4. Martha Margaret Dodson, born on 21 July 1904, died on 7 January 1994 in Florence, Lauderdale County, Alabama, but is buried in Tuscaloosa Memorial Park in Tuscaloosa, Tuscaloosa County, Alabama.

Top  

Baldwin-Howard children who went west

When, where, and why they wandered

The latter half of the 19th century was perhaps the most "unsettled" era in North American history. The century began with the United States barely 24 years old as a state but in its "terrible twos" in terms of maturity. It wanted its way and threw tantrums throughout the century to forge what became a "shore to shining shore" empire that spilled into the Pacific as far as Hawaii and the Philippines by 1898.

The last states to join the Union before Alaska and Hawaii much later in 1959, the year I graduated from high school, were all western states in which the Baldwin-McCoy, Baldwin-Robbins, and Baldwin-Steele families of John Milton Baldwin, William Henley Baldwin, and Newton Bascum Baldwin would ultimately settle after wandering around the midwest and west for a while.

State          Statehood

North Dakota   2 Nov 1889
South Dakota   2 Nov 1889
Montana        8 Nov 1889
Washington    11 Nov 1889
Idaho          3 Jul 1890
Wyoming       10 Jul 1890
Utah           4 Jan 1896
Oklahoma      16 Nov 1907
New Mexico     6 Jan 1912
Arizona       14 Feb 1912

Kentucky -- where the Baldwin-Howard family moved around 1863, during the Civil War -- was part of Virginia until it became the 15 state of the Union in 1792. It became one of what I would call the "mideast" states that took the overflow of the growing populations of the eastcoast states, and from which its own growing population would cross later cross the Mississippi in significant numbers to seek better fortunes in midwest and western, especially northwestern, territories and states, after migrating through central states and even the Indian Territory that became the eastern part of Oklahoma west of Arkansas.

William Henley and Nancy Jane Baldwin

  1. 1890 Census Gray Hawk Post Office, Sturgeon Precinct No. 6, Jackson County, Kentucky
     1. Robert Finley, 30 Oct 1875, Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
     2. Mary Elizabeth, 7 Jul 1877, Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
     3. John Milton, 16 Jul 1879, Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
    1880 census Pond Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
     4. William Alexander, 28 May 1881, Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
     5. Alfred James, 21 July 1884, Clay County, Kentucky
     6. Martha Ellen, Sept 1885
     7. Jesse Marion, 6 Apr 1887, Louisville, Clay County, Kentucky
    1887-1889 Baldwin-Robbins family leaves Kentucky
     8. David Earl, 23 Jan 1890, Arkansas
    1890 census lost
     9. Samuel Burton, 26 Aug 1892, Missouri
    11 November 1894, Mary Elizabeth marries P. Collins in Indian Territory, later part of Oklahoma. They were living in Tahlequah, today the county seat of Cherokee County, immediately southwest of Delaware County. Both counties are in the northeast corner of Oklahoma. Delaware County shares its eastern border with both Missouri and Arkansas.
    1. The Baldwin-Robbins family may have lived in Indian Territory for a while at this time. Mary Elizabeth and her husband P. Collins are in Mt. Idaho, Idaho County, Idaho in the 1900 census, on the same sheet with her uncle Samuel L.B. Baldwin and his wife Nancy Jane Smith, and her Baldwin-Robbins parents are also in Mt. Idaho at the time of this census. The 1910 census shows "Mary Elizabeth" and "Sinner P. Collins" back in former Indian Territory, in Delaware County, Oklahoma, and her parents are enumerated in the same township.

    10. Elsie, Mar 1896, Clearwater County, Idaho
    11. Bertha Leona, 7 Feb 1898, Jarvis, Oregonn
    1900 census, Mount Idaho Precinct, Idaho County, Idaho
    19 March 1907 Idaho Letter dated "Stites, Idaho, Mar.19" reports that "William Baldwin, a former Kentuckian, had a bad accident a few days ago. He got his house and everything burned down and he and his family went to the house of his son in their night clothes in a fifteen-inch snow."
    1. The "son" was probably "John M. Baldwin" (30), the head of a household described in the 1910 census for Stites Precinct, Idaho County, Idaho, when William Henley and Nancy Jane Baldwin are in Delaware County, Oklahoma. John M. and his wife, "Stella E." (33), had been married 8 years and 4 of their 6 children survived. John M. is a farmer on his own account on a general farm he owns. His brother "Bert Baldwin" 17, born in Missouri, is residing with him, and is a laborer doing odd jobs . Presumably, after the fire, William and Nancy left Samuel Burton with John Milton to explore opportunities in Oklahoma with their daughter Mary Elizabeth and her husband Siner P. Collins, who had married and lived in Indian Territory. "Samuel B." 17 is also enumerated in the 1910 census for Delware County, Oklahoma (see below).

    1910 census, Saline [struck out] Township 1, Delaware County, Oklahoma
    1920 census, Stites Village, Idaho County, Idaho
    1930 census, Stites Precinct, Idaho County, Idaho
    1. Traveling west from Jackson County through southern Kentucky one can cross the Mississippii river into the southeast corner of Missouri immediately above Arkansas. If continuing west through southern Missouri, or through northern Arkansas, one reaches Delaware County in Oklahoma. Delaware County is the second county to the south from the upper northeast corner of Oklahoma. It is bordered on the east by McDonald County in Missouri and Benton County in Arkansas, hence Delaware, McDonald, and Benton are tri-state counties. The Cherokee "Trail of Tears" passed directly through this area into what became Indian Territory, and Cherokee tribes later regarded part of the area as the "Delaware District" of their nation. The district and later the county took its name from the Delaware tribes which had first migrated to the area and then allied themselves with some Cherokee tribes against the Osage.

Top  

Baldwin-Howard family galleries

The following photographs of members of the extended Baldwin-Howard line are copped (and some cropped) from images posted on Ancestry.com. All images from Ancestry.com have been attributed only to Ancestry.com, except those for which I have been able to confirm the identity of the photographer and/or scanner by direct email contact. The colors of some of the received images appear to have been doctored if not entirely changed by a photo editor. In principle, my own scans are unaltered versions of 24-bit color scans that show the photographs as they looked at the time they were scanned.

Baldwin-Howard children

 0.     John R. Baldwin      1828-1909
 0.     Rebecca Howard       1828-1853/1854
 0.     Margaret Howard      1835-1912

John's children with Rebecca
 1.  1. Elizabeth Letitia    1849-1930 Taylor
 2.  2. John Milton          1851-1936
 3.  3. Mary Ellen           1853-1909 Lewis

John's children with Margaret
 4.  1. William Henley       1856-1937
 5.  2. Robert Ewing         1858-1942
 6.  3. Sarah J. (Mary J.)   1859-1859
 7.  4. Unnamed boy          1861      ? 
 8.  5. Newton Bascum        1861-1919
 9.  6. James Alfred         1864-1954
10.  7. Elihu Joseph         1866-1942
11.  8. Henry Clay           1867-1950
12.  9. Martha Ann           1871-1934 Moore
13. 10. George Finley        1873-1946
14. 11. Samuel L.B.          1875-1900
15. 12. Archelus Fernando    1876-1935
16. 13. Charles Nelson       1878-1944

The 1900 census states that Margaret had 14 children of whom 11 were still alive.
The 1910 census says she had had 12 children 11 of whom survived.

There is some evidence, though not yet confirmed, that Margaret gave birth to a daughter named Sarah -- or Sarah J. or Mary J. -- who died several months her birth in 1860, and to an unnamed son who was born and Christened the following year, and presumably also died in 1861 or possibly a bit later. Both children are are associated with John R. and Margaret Baldwin in Poor Valley, Lee County, Virginia. See Margaret's children (below) for details.

10.0 John R. Baldwin and Rebecca and Margaret Howard

John R. Baldwin John R. Baldwin Margaret Howard

John R. Baldwin (1828-1909) with Margaret Howard (1835-1912)
Occasion, place, date, and present owner and provenance unknown
Copped from Ancestry.com ("originally shared" by JLK Shack 4 June 2008)

John R. Baldwin (1828-1909) and Margaret Howard (1835-1912)
Occasion, place, date, and present owner and provenance unknown
Copped from Ancestry.com ("originally shared" by B.J. (Betty) Baldwin 12 June 2018

Two variations of apparently the same portraits of John R. Baldwin and Margaret Howard are floating around Ancestry.com. Crops of just the faces have also been saved to many family trees in Ancestry.com. The image on the left is generally attributed to JLK Shack, who posted it on 4 June 2008, a month after she became an Ancestry.com member on 6 May 2008. The images on the right were posted a decade later by B.J. (Betty) Baldwin. However, I have seen no disclosures of ownership or provenance, or descriptions of the sizes and conditions of the prints. The grounds for identifying the couple in the prints as John R. and Margaret (Howard) Baldwin -- a note on the back, a caption in an album, oral tradition in the family, whatever -- are not explained.

JLKSlack's image was adopted as thee banner of Baldwin Genealogy, a private group on Facebook created on 1 July 2017 by B.J. Baldwin Rudder, who added me to the group on 22 November 2018. The group shares information about both "Baldwin-Howard" lines -- one stemming from John R. Baldwin's first marriage with Rebecca Howard around 1848 -- the other from his second marriage in 1855, two years after Rebecca died leaving 3 children, with her sister Margaret Howard, who bore him 12 more children.

Mystery couple

Possibly John R. Baldwin and Margaret Howard
Possibly Jonas Steele and Elizabeth Grubb
Possibly no one related to these families

Mystery couple Mystery couple Mystery couple

Undated, uncaptioned matte print provisionally associated with Baldwin-Steele materials
From the Wetherall Family Collection currated by this writer William O. Wetherall
Great-great-great grandson of John R. and Margaret (Howard) Baldwin

Two portraits

The "Mystery couple" photograph shows two portraits standing on grass against a tree. Judging from the print's dimensions -- 4-3/8 x 3-1/2 inches (aspect ratio 1.25) -- and its matted paper with rounded corners -- the print was probably made from 3.5mm color negative film in the 1960s or 1970s. I myself shot and printed lots of 35mm film this way film during the same period.

The portraits in the photo, however, are old.

At first glance, I thought the print had been sepia toned. But closer examination of the print shows a rich texture of brown tones that is absent in filtered prints -- and traces of color. So the print may have turned out dark and brownish as a result of taking a closeup of two bright sepia-toned portraits against the dark bark of a tree in deep shade. The grass in the foreground may have turned out dark because the exposure was based on the bright portraits, which left the foreground underexposed -- in addition to which the grass was partly backlit by reflection off the portraits. In any event, I would take the print to be "natural" rather than "doctored".

Visually, and when the image of the print is scaled on the screen of a monitor, the portrait of the woman is a bit wider and longer than that of the man. The woman's portrait also has a slightly smaller aspect ratio -- roughly 1.314 compared to 1.366 for the man's -- meaning that the woman's portrait is a bit wider in relation to its length than the man's -- which I have on good authority is not a reflection of the fact that women generally have wider pelvic girdles. In any event, the size of the portraits in comparison with the blades of grass along their bases, and the diameter of the tree in the back, suggest something between 6-1/2 x 8-1/2 (1.308) and 8 x 11 (1.375) inches.

The designs of the two portraits are also somewhat different. They may have been made at different times. And they may have been made in the middle of the 20th century from prints made in the late 19th century. Without information about the origin of the portraits, all manner of scenarios are possible.

Why on grass against a tree?

Why, though, set such portraits against a tree that appears to be by a lawn? Trees and lawns can be found in backyards, parks, and cemeteries. I imagined the "Mystery couple" photo being taken during a burial or memorial ceremony.

The Baldwin-Steele graves in Woodlawn Cemetery in St. Maries contain the relics of the N. Bascum Baldwin (1862-1919), M. Ellen Baldwin (1863-1943), their 4th daughter Ida Mae (Baldwin) Wetherall (1890-1923), and their 3rd daughter Almeda Jane (Baldwin) Ure (1888-1971) and son-in-law Clifford Melvin Ure (1887-1953). The last to be buried in the Baldwin-Steele plot was Meda, in 1971 -- which falls within the span of time when matted prints with round corners were popular. And Woodlawn Cemetery has many trees and lots of shade, penetrated by beams of light.

I keep the "Mystery couple" print with photographs from my father's Baldwin-Steele line, because that is where it ended up when I first sorted family photographs several years before my mother died in 2003. My father, William B. Wetherall, Ida Baldwin's son, died in 2013. I was able to talk with him about some photographs, but not this one. It seemed related to another, more finely matted print -- 5-3/16th x 4 inches (aspect ratio 1.297) with square corners -- showing the front of the above Baldwin-Steele plot.

At the time I sorted the photographs, my mother's maternal and paternal grandparents were photographically accounted for, but my father had fewer photographs of his relatives, and none of his maternal grandparents. He had more portraits and snapshots from his father's side, but more intimate detritus -- letter's and postcards -- from his mother's side.

Revising hypotheses

Of interest to me, though, was that -- while there were no photographs of graves of my father's principal paternal relatives, beginning with his father and paternal grandparents and great grandparents, all in Iowa -- there was the above snapshot, probably sent him by a Baldwin-Steele aunt or cousin, of his mother's headstone in front and a bit to the right of the tombstone shared by his maternal Baldwin-Steele grandparents. I had portraits of his paternal (Wetherall-Beaman) grandparents, so I simply assumed that the portraits standing against the tree were probably of his maternal (Baldwin-Steele) grandparents. This, at least, was my first hypothesis.

Then in January 2017, about 4 years after my father died, a Baldwin-Steele cousin I have met only through email sent me a cockeyed, apparently sepia-filtered scan of a portrait of the Baldwin-Steele family, showing N.B. and Ellen Baldwin with their 4 daughters in their finest -- the first photos of N.B. and Ellen I had ever seen. My paternal maternal great grandparents now had faces. And an older woman in several snapshots of my father's maternal cousins now had a name -- "Grandma Baldwin" -- as my father called her. But the cockeyed scan of the family portrait remains the only image of N.B. Baldwin that I have seen.

The family portrait overturned my hypothesis that the portraits standing against a tree were of N.B. and Ellen. But I immediately conjectured that, if not of N.B. and Ellen, they might be of N.B.'s parents John R. Baldwin and Margaret Howard, or of Ellen's parents Jonas Steele and Elizabeth Grubb.

Wishful thinking

As nice as it would be to find portraits of either my Baldwin-Howard or Steele-Grubb great-great-great grandparents, the fact is I have no objective evidence that the "Mystery couple" is related to anyone in my family. It might have been from a friend of one of my parents and been accidently thrown in with family photographs.

In November 2018, I posted images of the "Mystery couple" photograph on Baldwin Genealogy, a private group on Facebook dedicated to the extended Baldwin-Howard lines. There was a lot of enthusiasm and speculation among group members, but no consensus that the faces in the "Mystery couple" print match the faces in the portrait of John R. and Margaret Baldwin that the group features as its banner (see above).

"old family photographs"

The Baldwin-Steele cousin who shared the image of the above-mentioned Baldwin-Steele family portrait with me in 2017 wrote this in the email to which she attached the image.

Last summer, my mom gave me some wonderful old pictures of family members. I am hoping you can identify the Baldwin sisters for me (from Left-Right). I think Danny (Almeda Jane) is on the left but am not certain.

This is the same dilemma everyone faces when they come into possession of "old family pictures". We recognize only people we have personally seen and remember -- and those that someone has pointed out to us and named. We trust our own memories, and the memories of others, but memories can be wrong.

My Baldwin-Steele cousin -- a straight up 4th cousin of my grandchildren -- was right in her identity of "Danny (Almeda Jane)" -- her great-great grandmother -- my father's maternal "Aunt Meda" as she was known in my family -- the 3rd of N.B. and Ellen Baldwin's 4 daughters. In my reply, I identified the other 3 "Baldwin sisters" -- only one of whom, Sadie, I could truly remember meeting. I probably met everyone, including Ellen, when I was an infant several months old. And apparently Meda visited our home in San Francisco around 1947, when I would have seen her, but I can't remember. Ida and Lydia had died long before I was born.

In the summer of 1959, Sadie and Meda, and Sadie's daughter Faye, hosted Baldwin-Steele reunion dinners in Washington and Idaho. The Wetherall family attended -- all but me, as I had just graduated from high school and had started a summer job in San Francisco. But I saw, and now curate, the photographs that document the reunion. And more recently, I have vetted the photographs with Baldwin-Steele cousins in Washington who helped me identify all but one person in the photographs. In the process of working with others who actually knew the people whose faces I did not recognize, I became acquainted with the faces, and could identify them in other photographs.

Today it is fairly easy to get in touch with distant cousins in collateral lines. Not all have older family photographs, and not who have photographs are sufficiently motivated by family history to organize them and identify unfamiliar faces in unknown places from times before one was born. If I hadn't spent considerable time working with my mother's and father's photographs before they died, I wouldn't have known where to begin, and might have thrown most of their memories away.

Family history as "triage"

Practically all collections of family photographs are radically "triaged" when it comes time to empty the drawers and closets of deceased parents. Children have a natural curiosity about their family roots -- but pursuing family history as "history" -- setting high standards of "evidence" -- takes a certain attitude toward "data" and "information" that, frankly, few people have, considering the demands on time and other resources, and the nagging suspicious that your own children, or others down the line, will end up throwing out most of the "old family photographs" and losing evening electronic images of them, as concerns with survival today trump more than a casual interest in ancestors one has never met or heard of in dinner-table talk.

So "Mystery couple" sits in a folder named "Unidentified" -- which is slowly filling as I continue to sort and organize prints and negatives of people and places I simply can't put a name to. My father would have thrown them away. My mother would have hesitated. My children won't have the space or other resources to keep even a fraction of what I have chosen to rescue from the detritus my parents left.

The odds are high that "Mystery couple" will eventually cease to exist except as an image file in a Google archive, with gazillions of other arrays of electro-magnetic bits and bytes that no one will visualize as faces of a woman and a man who left descendants but were forgotten within a century or less after their deaths.

Top  

Children of John R. Baldwin and Rebecca Howard

Baldwin-Howard children (Rebecca)

 0.     John R. Baldwin      1828-1909
 0.     Rebecca Howard       1828-1853/1854

John's children with Rebecca
    Name               Born         Died         Age
      Birth interval
 1. Elizabeth Letitia  26 Aug 1849   6 May 1930  80 Taylor
      25 months 13 days
 2. John Milton         9 Oct 1851  29 May 1936  84
      15 months 21 days
 3. Mary Ellen         30 Jan 1853  14 Feb 1909  56 Lewis

10.1 Elizabeth Letitia Baldwin and Jesse Milburn Taylor

Elizabeth Letitia Baldwin Elizabeth Letitia Baldwin (1849-1930)
and Jesse Milburn Taylor (1842-1934)

Occasion, place, date unknown
Image from B.J. Baldwin Rudder
Elizabeth Letitia Baldwin Jesse Milburn Taylor (1842-1934)
Occasion, place, date unknown
Image from B.J. Baldwin Rudder

Jesse Milburn Taylor, aka J.M. Taylor, was born on 18 August 1842 in Harlan County, Kentucky. He died on 6 May 1934 in Kentucky. The 1850 census enumerates him at age 8 with his parents and siblings in District 1 of Harlan County. The 1860 census lists him in the household of his parents and siblings, in the Harlan Courthouse Post Office area of Harlan County, as a farm laborer, age 17.

Some family trees associate Jesse M. Taylor of Harlan, Kentucky with a "Jesse M. Taylor" who enlisted on 27 May 1861 in Weldon, North Carolina, with the rank of Sergeant in the Second Infantry, at age 19. This is not the Jesse M. Taylor of Harlan County, Virginia, who was 3-months shy of 19 in May 1861 -- and, had he wanted to join a Confederate military unit, could have stepped across the much closer borders of Virginia or Tennessee.

Elizabeth Letitia Baldwin was born in Virginia on 26 August 1849 and died in Kentucky on 6 May 1930.

"Jesse M. Taylor" married "E. Baldwin" on 13 January 1870 in Harlan County, Kentucky. The 1880 census shows them in the 13th or 6th Magisterial District of Harlan County. All censuses from 1900 through 1930 enumerate them in Laurel County precincts, and they died and are buried in Laurel County.

  1. The 1850 census for District 31, Lee County, Virginia shows "Elizabeth" age 1 as the daughter of "John Baldwin" age 22 and "Rebecca" age 22. The Baldwins are farming. John and Elizabeth were born in Virginia. Rebecca was born in Kentucky.
  2. The 1860 census for "Free Inhabitants" of the Jonesville Post Office area in the Western District of Lee County, Virginia, shows "Elizabeth L." age 10 with her parents "John R. Balwin" [sic = Baldwin] age 31 "Margaret" 22, followed by her younger siblings "John M." 8, "Mary E. D." 7, "Wm. H." 4, and "Robbert" [sic = Robert] 3. The last listed member of the Baldwin household is "Thos N.", age 16, a farm laborer. He appears to be John R. Baldwin's younger brother Thomas N. Thomas (1843-1924). Everyone on the household -- including Margaret -- is said to have been born in Lee County, Virginia. The three older children -- Elizabeth L., John M., and Mary E.D. -- are Rebecca's. Wm. H. and Robert are Margaret's. Mary E.D. was born on 30 Jan 1853, and Robert was born on 19 March 1856, practically 9-months to the day that John married Margaret on 13 June 1855. Rebecca appears to have died sometime after January 1853 and the spring of 1855, most likely earlier than later during this period.
  3. The Baldwin-Howard family moves from Virginia to Kentucky around 1863.
  4. "Jesse M. Taylor" and "E. Baldwin" marry in Harlan County, Kentucky, on 13 January 1870.
  5. The 1880 census for the 13th and 6th Magisterial Districts of Harlan County, Kentucky, shows "Jessee M. Taylor" 37 with his wife "Elizabeth" 31 and 4 children -- "Martha" 8, "John" 7, "William" 5, and a son "Unnamed" 9/12. Jessee M. is a laborer, Elizabeth is a housekeeper, and the children are at home. Jessee M. was born in Virginia to a North Carolina-born father and Kentucky-born mother. Elizabeth was born in Virginia to a Virginia born mother and a Kentucky VA-born mother (note the overstrike)
  6. The 1900 census for Raccoon in Laurel County, Kentucky, shows "Jesse M. Taylor" 57, Aug 1842, with his wife "Elizabeth" 50, Aug 1849, and 4 children -- "Jesse" 20, Aug 1879, "Lourittie" [Lou Retta] 18, Oct 1881, "Boyd" 16, Mar 1883 (1885?), and "Anna B." 14, Mar 1886. Jesse M. is farming on a farm he owns free of mortgage. The son Jesse is teaching school. The Taylors have been married 28 years, and 6 of Elizabeth's 8 children have survived.
  7. The 1910 census for Raccoon Precinct in Laurel County shows "Jesse Taylor" 68 with his wife "Elizabeth" 61, plus 2 children, a son-in-law, and 3 grandchilden -- their daughter "Liew" [Lou] 28, son-in-law "Jarvis" Vaughn" 26, daughter "Anna" 24, and grandchildren "Mattie" 4, "Lester" 2, and "Not named" 6/12 months. Jesse is farming on a general farm he owns free of mortgage, and Jarvis is helping him as a farm laborer on a home farm. Jesse is described as a "survivor" of the "UA" (Union Army). The Taylor's have been married 40 years and 6 of Elizabeth's 7 children survive. The Vaughns have been married 7 years and all 3 of Anna's 3 children survive as enumerated in this census.
  8. The 1920 census for London Precinct No. 3 shows "Jesse M. Taylor" 77 with his wife "Elizabeth" 70, daughter "Anna B. Vaughn" 33, granddaughter "Mattie" 14, grandsons "Lester" 12 and Delbert 9, and granddaughter "Nellie F." 8, on Old Whitley Road. Jesse M. is farming on a general farm on his own account. He owns the farm free of mortgage. His oldest son "John Taylor" 47 is farming on an adjacent farm, which he rents, with his wife "Dora" and 3 children.
  9. The 1930 census for Magisterial District 1, London No. 3 Precinct shows "J. M. Taylor" 87 living with his wife "Elizabeth" 81, and a granddaughter, "Lavonna" [Taylor] 20, on New Whitley Road. None of the three has an occupation but both J.M. and Elizabeth have employment. He was born in Virginia to a Virginia-born father and Tennessee-born mother (unlike earlier census reports). She was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents (as in earlier reports). He was 27 [sic] and she was 29 19 [sic] when they married. J.M. is a veteran ("Yes") of a war ("Civ").
  10. Elizabeth (Baldwin) Taylor died in 1930. She is buried in A.R. Dyche Memorial Park in London, Laurel County, Kentucky. Her headstone, reading simply "Elizabeth Taylor / 1849-1930", is associated with a tombstone reading "Taylor".
  11. Jessie M. Taylor died on 6 May 1934 in Ghent, Carroll County, Kentucky. He is buried in A.R. Dyche Memorial Park in London, Laurel County, Kentucky, among other Taylor family graves around a "Taylor" tombstone.
    1. A Commonweath of Kentucky Certificate of Death states that "Jessie M. Taylor", widowed, wife's name "Elizabeth Taylor", born 18 August 1843 in Wise County, Virginia, to Virginia-born William Taylor and Sallie Taylor of unknown birthplace, died in the town of Ghent in Carroll County of "Chronic interstitial nephritis" on 6 May 1934, at age 91 years 8 months 18 days.

Taylor-Baldwin children

Elizabeth L. Baldwin and Jesse M. Taylor appear to have had 8 children.


0. Elizabeth Letitia Baldwin  26 Aug 1849   6 May 1930
0. Jesse Milburn Taylor       18 Aug 1842   6 May 1934
1880 census
1. Martha  8          c1872
     Married Elias Moore 8 Aug 1887
2. John Douglas  3 Nov 1872   7 Aug 1954
     Married Dora M. Ledford
3. William J.   24 Jan 1874  28 Jan 1958
     Married Sylvania Ledford (1879-1961)
     Buried A.R. Dyche Memorial Park, London, Laurel County, Kentucky
4. George R.      [Aug 1877]    Jul 1878 (11 months) Harlan
5. Unnamed      circa Aug/Sep 1879 
1900 census 6 of 8 survive
6. Jesse Jay    18 Aug 1879  15 Nov 1973
     A.R. Dyche Memorial Park
6. Lou Retta    30 Oct 1881  19 Jul 1963
     Married Lou Moren
     A.R. Dyche Memorial Park 
7. Boyd F.      21 Mar 1885  15 Apr 1955
     Wiggington Cemetery, London, Laurel County, Kentucky
8. Anna B.         Mar 1886

Top  

10.2 John Milton Baldwin and Verena Marie McCoy

John Milton Baldwin John Milton Baldwin (1851-1936)
Occasion, place, date unknown
Ancestry.com photo posted by TDavis
John Milton Baldwin John Milton Baldwin (1851-1936)
Occasion, place, date unknown
Trim of image from B.J. Baldwin Rudder
John Milton Baldwin John Milton and Verena Marie (McCoy) Baldwin
Occasion, place, and date unknown
Trim of image from B.J. Baldwin Rudder
  1. John Milton Baldwin was born on 9 October 1851 in Jonesville, Lee County, Virginia, the 2nd child and 1st son of John R. Baldwin and Rachel Rebecca (Howard) Baldwin.
  2. The 1860 census for "Free Inhabitants" of the Jonesville Post Office area of the Western District of Lee County in the State of Virginia shows "John M." 8 as the son of "John R. Balwin" [sic = Baldwin] 31 and his wife "Margaret" 22, with 1 older and 3 younger siblings -- "Elizabeth L." 10, "Mary E.D." 7, "Wm. H." 4, and "Robbert [sic = Robert] E." 3 -- plus "Thos. N. [Baldwin]" 16, a farm laborer. Elizabeth L., John M., and Mary E.D. are the children of Margaret's older sister Rebecca, who died in 1853 or 1854. Only William H. and Robert E. are Margaret's children. Thomas Newton Baldwin is John R. Baldwin's younger brother and the namesake of the next-born Baldwin-Howard child, Newton Bascum Baldwin.
  3. The Baldwin-Howard family moves from Virginia to Kentucky around 1863.
  4. Verena Marie McCoy was born on 2 March 1864 in Millville, Shasta County, California.
  5. The 1870 census for the Gray Hawk Post Office area of Sturgeon Precinct No. 6, in Jackson County, shows "John M." 18 with his parents "John R. Baldwin" 41 and "Margaret" 35, his younger siblings "Mary E." 17 (Rebecca's children), William H." 14, "Robert E." 12, "Newton B." 8, "James A." 6, "Elihu J." 3, "Henry C." 2 (Margaret's children) -- plus "James V. Howard" 23, a farm laborer, and "Sarah E. Thomas" 14, a domestic servant. John M., William H. and Robert E. were also farm laborers. All the Baldwins were born in Virginia except Margaret and the three youngest children James A., Elihu J., and Henry C. James V. Howard the Sarah E. Thomas were born in Virginia.
  6. An Elko County, Nevada record shows that "John M. Baldwin", a resident of Wells in Elko County, and "Virena [sic = Verena] McCoy", a resident of Star Valley in Elko County, married in Wells on 5 July 1880. (Source: Brigham Young University, Idaho, Western States Marriage Record Index)
  7. The 1900 census for Meeteetse (Precinct) in Big Horn County, Wyoming, shows "John M. Baldwin" 48, Oct 1851, with his wife "Verina" 36, Apr 1864, and 7 children -- "Rebecca" 14, Apr 1886, "John D. W." 17, June 1882, "Robert N." 11, Sept 1888, "William H." 9, Jan 1890, "Leonard W." 6, Mar 1894, "Frederick B." 3, June 1896, and "Bertha" 1, Aug 1898. John M. is a farmer on a farm he owns free of mortgage. John D.W. is a farm laborer. Rebecca, Robert N, and William are at school. John M. and Verena have been married 20 years, and 8 of the 10 children she has borne have survived -- the oldest apparently having already left home.
    1. John M. was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents. Verina was born in California to a Tennessee-born father and Pennsylvania-born mother. Rebecca was born in Kentucky, John D.W. in Nevada, Robert N. and William H. in Nebraska, and the youngest three children in Wyoming. This implies that the family migrated as follows.
      1. 1880 Marriage in Nevada
        1882 Nevada
        1886 Kentucky
        1888-1890 Nebraska
        1894-1900 Wyoming (east of Nebraska)
    2. Later records show that John and Verena remained in Wyoming the rest of their lives.
  8. The 1910 census Meeteetse Precinct, part of Park County, Wyoming, shows "John M. Baldwin" 58 with is wife "Virena" [sic = Verena] 46 and 8 children -- "Robert N." 21, "William H." 19, "Leonard R." 16, "Fred B." 14, "Bertha V." 12, "Mazzie V." 7, "Katie M." 4, "John D.W. Baldwin" 27, and "Rebecca J. Highland" 24 -- plus John D.W. Baldwin's wife "Kathie B." 24 and 4 children "Morrison M." 5, "Viola M." 4, "Leachester" 2, and "Dora I." 7/12 -- plus Rebecca J. Highland's husband "Blane J. Highland" 26 and 2 children, "James A." 2 and "Clifford C." 11/12. John M. is a farmer on a general farm he owns with a mortage. His 4 oldest sons and son-in-law are farm laborers on a home farm. John M. and Verona have been married 30 years and 10 of her 15 children survive. John D.W. Baldwin and Kathie B., born in Wyoming, have been married 6 years and all 4 of their children survive. Rebecca J. and her husband Blane Highland, born in Iowa, have been married 8 years and 2 of her 3 children survive. All the grandchildren were born in Wyoming.
    1. "Rebecca J. Baldwin" (1886–1956), residing in Meeteetse, married "Blaine J. Highland" (1883–1957) in Big Horn County, Wyoming, in August 1902.
    2. The 1920 census for Election District 17 in Hot Springs, Wyoming, shows "Rebecca" 32 as the wife of "Blaine Highland" 37, an oil well tool driver. They have three children -- "Orvil" 12, "Clifford" 10, and "Myrtle" 9.
    3. The 1930 census for Basin City, Big Horn County, Wyoming shows "Rebecca" 43 as the wife of "B.J. Highland" 46, a pool hall manager. Living with them are 2 childen -- "Orville" 22 and "Myrtle" 19 -- a daughter-in-law "Myrtle H." 21, Orville's wife, and their son "Herbert" 2; plus a lodger. Orville is an odd-job laborer and his sister Myrtle is a telephone operator. B.J. and Rebecca were 19 and 15 years old when they married, Orville and Myrtle H. 19 and 18.
    4. The 1940 census for Basin Town, Big Horn, Wyoming, shows "Rebecca" 51, a retail cosmetics saleslady, with her husband "Alden Metzler" 52, a municipality laborer, and "Donald T. Black" 8, head-of-household Alden's step-grandson, hence Rebecca's grandson. Both Adlen and Rebecca have had 5 years of schooling. The child is the son of Myrtle Louise Highland and Horace Wesley Black, both of Billings Montana, who married on 2 June 1930 in Red Lodge in Carbon County, Montana.
    5. Rebecca Jane Baldwin, born in Kentucky on 16 April 1886, died on 18 January 1956 in Basin, Wyoming. She is buried as "Rebecca J. Metzler" in Mount View Cemetery in Basin, Big Horn County, Wyoming.
      1. Gen Highland, a granddaughter of Clifford B. Highland (1909-1957), writes on Rebecca's Find a Grave memorial -- "great grandma . . . if you would of waited 3 more years before you went to heaven you would of seen me". Gen Highland's father is this writer's (Bill Wetherall's) 3rd cousin, hence she is my 3rd cousin once removed and my children's 4th cousin.
  9. The 1920 census for Meeteetse Township in Park County, Wyoming, shows "John M. Baldwin" 68 living on "Main St." with his wife "Virena L." 57 and 3 children -- "Robert N." 30, "Mazie W." 16, and "Katie M." 14 -- plus three male lodgers. John M. is a manager at a hotel and an employer, Verina is a cook at a hotel and employed, and Robert N. is a cattle stockman and an employer. The lodgers have no reported occupation.
  10. The 1930 census for part of Thermopolis town in Hot Springs County, Wyoming, shows "John Baldwin" 79 and "Verina" 66 as the father-in-law and mother-in-law of head-of-household "Louis C. Allman" 31, who is living on "Clark Street" with his wife "Edith" 27 and 4 children -- "Adrian" 8, "Marie" 6, "Gloria" 5, and "Romonia" 10/12. Louis C. Allman, born in Iowa, is a mechanic in an auto garage. John Baldwin is retired. Louis C. and Edith were 22 and 17 when they married, implicitly in 1919 or 1920. A transcribed record in a marriage database shows that "Louis C. Allman" and "Edith E. Baldwin" married on 11 December 1920 in Cody, Park County, Wyoming.
  11. Verena Marie (McCoy) Baldwin died on 6 February 1934 in Meeteetse, Park County, Wyoming. She is buried in Meeteetse Cemetery under a common "Baldwin" headstone with John.
  12. John Milton Baldwin died on 29 May 1936 in Meeteetse, Park County, Wyoming. He is buried in Meeteetse Cemetery under a common "Baldwin" headstone with Verena.

Baldwin-McCoy children

John M. Baldwin and Verena M. McCoy appear to have had as many as 15 children.

 0. John Milton Baldwin   9 Oct 1851   6 Feb 1934
 0. Verene Marie McCoy    2 Mar 1864  29 May 1936

 1. Mary Ann         14 Jun 1881   3 Jun 1964  "Anna"  Barrow, Dobbs
      Born Wells, Elko County, Nevada
      Mrs. Anna Barlow and Roy H. [Herbert] Barlow (1875-1954)
        both of Meeteetse, Big Horn County, Wyoming
        marry on 22 Nov 1906 in Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri
      Anna M. Barlow, divorced, of Norland, Wyoming
        father "Don Baldwin", mother "Virena McCoy"
        and Harry Dobbs (1875–1950) of Manderson, Wyoming
        marry on 16 January 1923 in Billings, Yellowstone County, Montana
      Died Spokane, Spokane County, Washington

 2. John Dewight     18 Jun 1882  28 May 1942  "Johnny" 
      Born Wells, Elko County, Nevada
      Died Meeteetse, Park County, Wyoming

 3. James Henry       8 Jul 1884  22 Sep 1884
      Born and died Morrill Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky

 4. Rebecca Jane     16 Apr 1886  19 Jan 1956  Highland
      Born Morrill Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
      Married Blaine J. Highland (1883–1957) in Big Horn County, Wyoming, in August 1902
      1910 census shows Highland-Baldwin family residing in
        John and Verena Baldwin (Baldwin-McCoy) household
      Died Basin, Big Horn County, Wyoming  

 5. Robert Newton    18 Sep 1888  11 Jan 1938
      Born Crawford, Dawes County, Nebraska
      Married Flossie M. Frederick 1 Jun 1920
      Died Billings, Yellowstone County, Montana

 6. William Harrison  6 Jan 1891  20 Jun 1951
      Born Crawford, Antelope County, Nebraska
      Died Meeteetse, Park County, Wyoming,

 7. Elizabeth Janette  13 Mar 1893  30 May 1893
      Born and died in Lander, Fremont County, Wyoming

 8. Leonard Wright   13 Mar 1894  28 Dec 1940
      Born Lander, Fremont County, Wyoming
      Died Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon

 9. Fredrick Burton   8 Jun 1896  18 Nov 1916
      Born Meeteetse, Park County, Wyoming
      Died Worland, Washakie County, Wyoming

10. Bertha Violet     6 Aug 1898  23 Feb 1978  Cogdill
      Born Meeteetse, Park County, Wyoming
      Married Douglas [Hunt] Cogdil in on 6 December 1915
        in Dumbell, Park County, Wyoming 
      Died Lander, Fremont County, Wyoming
      Buried as "Bertha V. / 1898-1978"
        with husband "Douglas H. / 1892-1967"
        under "Cogdil" tombstone in Meeteetse Cemetery
        in Meeteetse, Park County, Wyoming

1900 census states that 8 of 10 children had survived.
The census enumerates 7 children from John to Bertha.
Mary (1) has married and left home.
James (3) and Elizabeth (7) have passed away.
Which accounts for all 10 children.

11. Postulated child who did not survive
12. Postulated child who did not survive

13. Edith Verena      3 Apr 1903  15 Jun 1987  "Mazzie"  Allman, Sisco (?)
     Born Meeteetse, Park County, Wyoming
     "Edith E. Baldwin" married "Louis C. [Charles] Allman" on 11 Dec 1920
       in Cody, Park County, Wyoming (transcription in database)
     1930 census shows John and Verena Baldwin residing in Allman-Baldwin household
     Died Crescent City, Del Norte County, California

14. Marie W.           1904 to nlt 14 Apr 1910
      Reportedly born in Nebraska
      Not enumerated in 1910 census hence presumbed to have died before census

15. Katheryn Margaret 2 Feb 1906  23 Jan 1952  Naldrett
      Born Meeteetse, Park County, Wyoming
      Died Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon
      Buried as "Kathryn M. Naldrett / 1909-1952"
        in Riverview Abbey Mausoleum and Crematory
        in Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon
      An obituary in the 19 January 1952 edition of The Oregonian (Portland, Oregon)
        reported that "Mrs. Naldrett was born February 2, 1909, in Wyoming
        and moved to Portland 11 years ago. Survivors include . . . 
        four sisters, Edith Sisco, Portland; Rebecca Metzler, Basin, Wyo.;
        Annie Dobbs, Spokane, and Bertha Cogdill, Long Beach, Cal."
        Source: Find a Grave

1910 census reports that 10 of 15 children had survived.
James (3) and Elizabeth (7) have passed away.
And Marie (14) appears to have passed away.
If the "10 of 15" figures are correct,
then 2 other children, possibly twins,
are postulated to have been born but not survived
between the 1900 and 1910 censuses (11, 12).

Top  

10.3 Mary Ellen Baldwin and Zela (Thomas L.) Lewis

Mary Ellen Baldwin Mary Ellen Baldwin (1853-1909) with husband Zela Lewis (1847-1929)
Occasion, place, date unknown
Copped from Ancestry.com

Mary Ellen Baldwin's children

Mary Ellen Baldwin presents somewhat of a mystery in terms of how she is represented in documents. A Jackson county ledger clearly shows that "Zera Lewis" and "Mary Ellen Baldwin" were married on "March 8th 1880" but the box for the place of marriage is blank. The following censuses shed light on their marriage and family.

  1. Zera L. Lewis (Zera Thomas Lewis) was born on 4 February 1847 in Breathitt county, Kentucky.
  2. Mary Ellen Baldwin was born in Virginia on 30 January 1853 and raised in Kentucky.
  3. The 1860 census for "Free Inhabitants" of the Western District of Lee County, Virginia, shows "Mary E.D." age 7 with her parents "John R. Balwin" [sic = Baldwin] age 31 and "Margaret" 22, between her older siblings "Elizabeth L." age 10 and "John M." 8, and her younger siblings "Wm. H." 4 and "Robbert" [sic = Robert] 3. The last listed member of the household, "Thos N." 16, is a farm laborer. Everyone in the household -- including Margaret -- is said to have been born in Lee County, Virginia. The three older children -- Elizabeth L., John M., and Mary E.D. -- are Rebecca's. The younger 3 children -- Wm. H. and Robert are Margaret's. Mary E.D. was born on 30 Jan 1853, and Robert was born on 19 March 1856, practically 9-months to day that John married Margaret on 13 June 1855. Rebecca appears to have died sometime after January 1853 and the spring of 1855, most likely earlier than later during this period.
  4. The foundation for "D." in "Mary E.D." is not clear.
    I have seen no other records that refer to Mary Ellen as "Mary E.D."
  5. The 1880 census for Pond Creek, enumerated on 2 June with a datum of 1 June, shows "Mary E." 28 as the wife of "Lewis Zera (Jr)" 33 and lists 3 children -- son George B. 6, daughter Nancy J. 5, and daughter Maxaline 3. Above them, on the same enumeration sheet, are the households of John R. Baldwin, Elizabeth Steele, and William Baldwin. The parenthetic (Jr) following Zera Lewis is consistent with the 1870 census for the Gray Hawk Post Office area in Pond Creek Precinct No. 5 in Jackson County, which shows Zera Lewis, 22, as the son of Zera Lewis 50, and Chaney R. Lewis 50.
  6. The 1900 census for Pond Creek shows "Mary E." 47, born Jan 1853, as the wife of "Zera L. Lewis" [sic = Lewis, Zera L.] 53, born Feb 1877, with 8 children -- 3 sons and 5 daughters -- and Zera's parents. The first 2 children are "Geo. B." 26, Sept 1873, a "farm laborer", and "Maxaline" 23, June 1876. The other 6 children are "Rachel" 16, July 1883, "Thomas" 14, Nov 1885, "Sarah" 12, Mar 1888, "Girty" 10, Mar 1890, "Alfred" 7, June 1892, and "Lucreca" 3, July 1896. Zera's father and mother are both 80 and have been married for 60 years.
    1. James A. Baldwin 36, his wife Nancy A. 26, and their sons Wm. C. 7 and Stephen 1, are neighbors on the same enumeration sheet.
    2. The 1900 census states that Mary E. and Zera L. Lewis had been married "20" years, but "20" was first "24" years and "4" was overstruck by "0". The census also states that Mary E. had had 8 children of whom 6 survived. Among the 8 children enumerated on the census, the 6 youngest children appear to be hers, and the 2 older children are presumably children Zera brought to the marriage -- namely, George and Maxaline, the oldest and the youngest of the 3 children shown on the 1880 census.
  7. The 1910 census for Pond Creek shows "Lewis Thomas" 63, widowed, with a daughter "Gertie" 20, a son "Alfred" 17, and a daughter "Crecy" 13, next Zera's parents, and then his daughter "Maxie" 32, single, a "cook" with a "private family".
  8. The children shown on the 1880 census -- including George and Maxaline on the 1900 census -- were apparently not Mary's. Maxaline's death certificate, informed by her father "T. L. Lewis", bears this out. A death certificate filed on 22 October 1913 in Jackson county states that "Maxiline [sic = Maxaline] Lewis" of Moores Creek, Pond Creek, Jackson county, died on 30 September 1913. She had been doing "Housework" and was "Single". Information on the certificate, provided by "T. L. Lewis", states that she was born on 1 June 1877 in Moores Creek, that her father was "T. L. Lewis", born in "Breathit [sic = Breathitt] Co. Ky.", and that her mother's maiden name was "Litha Roberts", born in "Clay Co. Ky.". This "T. L. Lewis" is "Thomas L. Lewis" -- also known as Zera L. Lewis, Zera Thomas Lewis, and just Zera Lewis.
  9. Mary Ellen Lewis died on 14 February 1909 in Kentucky.
  10. Zera L. Lewis (Zera Thomas Lewis) died in Kentucky on 26 November 1929.
  11. Mary and Zera are buried in the Lewis Cemetery in Jackson county, Kentucky.
    1. Zera's father, Zera O. Lewis, born on 23 March 1819, died on 3 October 1910 about 4 months after the 1910 census, which correctly reported that he was 91. Zera's mother, Chana R. (Bowling) Lewis, born on 10 March 1820, died on 6 March 1916. They, too, are buried in Lewis Cemetery.

The plot thickens

  1. The 1870 census for Ponds county shows a "Letha R. Lewis", age 11 months, as the daughter of John Lewis, 26, a farmer, and Nancy E. Lewis, 22, keeping house, in the household immediately before the household of Zera Lewis and Chaney R. Lewis and 5 children, beginning with Zera Lewis, 22. A third Lewis household in the same group is headed by Delaney Lewis, 28, married to Matha, 26, with a daughter, Lafayette, 1 year old. Delaney Lewis and John Lewis are Zera's older brothers.
  2. "Litha R. Lewis" becomes "Talitha C. Lewis", 11, on the 1880 census for Laurel county. "T.C. Lewis" marries "Henry M. McWhorter" on 11 June 1888 in Jackson county, and the 1900 census for Sturgeon in Jackson County shows "Talitha McWhorter", 30, as the wife of Henry McWhorter, 33, and the mother of 5 surviving of 6 born children,

In a genealogy report titled Jesse Roberts Family History, Della Sue Curry Jones claims that "Zera Thomas Lewis" married "Mary Roberts" on 13 April 1871 and lists 10 children -- from the 1st "Johnathan K. Lewis" (b abt 1872) to the 10th "Alfred L. Lewis" (b1892-06-03, d1973-08-16). Jones lists the siblings in birth order -- except "Lucreca Lewis" (b abt 1896), who she shows 9th before Albert. The 4th and 5th siblings are "Maxaline Lewis" (b abt 1888 [sic = 1877]) and "Rachael Lewis" (b abt 1883) (page 22, see Yumpu).

Lewis-Baldwin children

The children associated with Mary Ellen Baldwin and Zela Lewis are as follows.

 0. Mary Elizabeth Baldwin  30 Jan 1853  14 Feb 1909
 0. Zera L.(Thomas) Lewis    4 Feb 1847  26 Nov 1929

 1. George B.      3 Sep 1873  27 Feb 1909
      Born in Kentucky • Kentucky
 2. Nancy Jane    17 Apr 1875   2 Jul 1937  Carpenter
      Born Jackson County, Kentucky
      Married Henry Pleasant "Pleas" Carpenter (1877–1951) on 13 Jan 1897 in Jackson, Kentucky
      Died Jackson County, Kentucky
      Buried in Lewis Cemetery, Jackson County, Kentucky
 3. Maxaline       1 Jun 1876  30 Sep 1913
      Born and died in Jackson County, Kentucky

The 1880 census shows above 3 children as those of Mary and Zera Lewis
and gives the impression that Mary bore them.
She would have been 20 when George was born.

 1. Geo. B., 26, born Sept 1873 (also on 1880 census, see above)
 3. Maxaline, 23, born June 1876 (also on 1880 census, see above)

 4. 1. Postulated child who did not survive  
 5. 2. Cora          27 Sept 1882  27 Sept 1882 (not on 1900 census)
         Apparently born and died same day in Kentucky
           2 or 3 years after Mary and Zera's marriage between late 1879 and early 1880

 6. 3. Rachael       25 Jul 1883  After 1900 census
         Born in Jackson County, Kentucky
         Still alive at time of 1900 census
 7. 4. Thomas Henry  22 Nov 1885  16 Aug 1936
         Born in Kentucky
 8. 5. Sarah Sally   22 Mar 1888  11 Feb 1969
         Born Jackson County, Kentucky
 9. 6. Gertrude      30 Mar 1890  After 1910 census
         "Gerty" ("Girty" and "Gertie" on 1900 and 1910 censuses) 
         Born Jackson County, Kentucky
         Still alive at time of 1910 census
10. 7. Alfred B.      3 Jun 1892  16 Aug 1973
         Born Jackson County, Kentucky
 	       Married Dora Bowling (1895-1984)
         Died Annville, Jackson County, Kentucky
         Shares "LEWIS" tombstone as "ALFRED" with "DORA" in
           Medlock Cemetery, Annville, Jackson County, Kentucky
           Also has headstone as "ALFRED LEWIS / OHIO / RCT [Regimental Combat Team] US ARMY" 
11. 8. Lucretia      20 Jul 1896  21 Dec 1977  Wilson 
         "Lucreca" on 1900 census.
         "Creacy" on 1910 census.
         Married "Thomas W. Wilson" (1896–1958)
         "Creasie", 23, on 1920 census as wife of "Thomas Wilson", 24, residing in
           District 3 of Pond Creek Precinct 2 of    Jackson County, Kentucky
           Household includes daughter "Rose", 3-8/12, and
           Wilson's father-in-law "Zera Lewis", 73, widowed
         Died Piqua, Miami County, Ohio
         Buried in Dayton Memorial Park Cemetery
           Dayton, Montgomery County, Ohio 

The 1900 census shows all of the above children except
"4. Postulated child who did not survive" and "5. Cora".
The census states that Mary and Zela Lewis had been married 20 years,
and Mary had had 8 children 6 of whom were still alive.
Assuming that the 8 children do not include "1. Geo. B." and "3. Maxaline",
and assuming that an Ancestry.com mention of "Cora" (1882-1882) is correct,
then one has to postulate the birth and death of another child.

Top  

Children of John R. Baldwin and Margaret Howard

Baldwin children Click on image to enlarge
1860 mortality census for the Western District of Lee County, Virginia
"Schedule 3: Persons who Died during the year ending 1st June, 1860,
in the Western District in the County of Lee State of Virginia"
"Sarah Baldwin" died in October 1859 when 6 months old
following 15-day bout with consumption

Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Baldwin children Baldwin children

Two versions of death records for "Sarah Baldwin" and "Sarah J. Baldwin"
Unconfirmed transcriptions from FHL (Family History Library) records
Left  From FHL Film 32441 showing "Sarah Baldwin"
born to "Baldwin" and "Margaret"
with 20 Oct 1859 death date
Right  From FHL Film 2048576 showing "Sarah J. Baldwin"
born to "S.R. J.R.? Baldwin" and "Margaret Baldwin"
with 30 Oct 1859 death date
Screen captured from Ancestor.com

Baldwin children Christening record for Mary J. Baldwin
Daughter of John R. and Magaret Baldwin
Born 23 May 1859 in Lee County, Virginia
Screen captured from FamilySearch
Baldwin children Christening record for unnamed son of John R. Baldwin
Born 23 Dec 1861 in Poor Valley, Lee County, Virginia
Screen captured from FamilySearch

Margaret Baldwin's children

Baldwin-Howard children (Margaret)

Born at 2-year intervals and long-lived

Some people will object to the characterization of women as breeders, but the only biological purpose of being a woman is to bear children, and the only (equal and complementary) biological purpose of men is to sire children. As a breeder, Rebecca died shortly after the birth of her 3rd child, but had she continued to be healthy and had a child every 2 or 3 years until she could no longer bear children, as many woman did in the past, she would probably have had from 8 to 12 children. Her sister Margaret, who stepped into the breech as it were, produced either 14 children (1900 census) or 12 children (1910 census) in the space of about 24 years. The genealogical problem is how many children did Margaret lose -- 1 if she had 12, or 3 if she had 14 -- or possibly 2 if in fact she had 13?

 0.     John R. Baldwin      1828-1909
 0.     Margaret Howard      1835-1912

John's children with Margaret
    Name               Born         Died         Age
      Birth interval
      Margaret is 20 years 6 months 18 days old
      John is 27 years 5 months 26 days old
 1. William Henley     19 Mar 1856  15 Feb 1937  80
      29 months 2 days
 2. Robert Ewing       21 Aug 1858         1942  84 	
 3. Sarah                    c1859     Oct 1859  6/12
    Sarah                    c1859  20 Oct 1859  4mo 7dy
    Sarah J.                 c1859  30 Oct 1859  4mo 7dy
       9 months 2 days from Robert Ewing
       Postpartum conception conditions vary, 
       but such a short interval suggests that 
       Sarah may have been born prematurely 
       by several weeks to a few months
       If Mary J. Baldwin is Sarah aka Sarah J.,
       then she would have been 5 mo 7 dy old,
       which is close to 6/12 years old,
       if she died on 30 Oct 1849
    Mary J.            23 May 1859
      40 months 2 days from Robert Ewing
      31 months 0 days from Mary J.
 4. Son                23 Dec 1861
      52 months 3 days from Robert Ewing
      43 months 1 day from Mary J.
      12 months 1 day from unamed son
 5. Newton Bascum      24 Dec 1862  22 Mar 1919  56
      15 months 30 days
 6. James Alfred       23 Apr 1864  21 Aug 1954  90
      29 months 13 days
 7. Elihu Joseph        6 Oct 1866   2 Jul 1942  75
      12 months 30 days
 8. Henry Clay          5 Nov 1867   7 Mar 1950  82
      31 months 28 days
 9. Martha Ann          3 Jul 1870  14 Mar 1934  63 Moore
      32 months 9 days
10. George Finley      12 Mar 1873  20 May 1946  73
      25 months 5 days
11. Samuel L.B.        17 Apr 1875  17 May 1941  76
      14 months 4 days
12. Archelus Fernando  20 Jun 1876  21 Feb 1935  58
      38 months 13 days 
    Margaret is 44 years 1 day old
    John is 50 years 11 months 11 days old
13. Charles Nelson      2 Sep 1879  31 Jul 1944  64

Average longevity

The 11 children who survived Margaret's death in 1912 lived an average of 73 years --ranging from 38 to 90. The average longevitiy of all 13 children, including Sarah and the unnamed boy, was 61 years. Biologically speaking, either figure signifies an unusual achievement -- given the fact that the average person born in the United States in the late 19th century could expect to live only around 50 years.

Average birth interval

Some 8555 days, or 23 years 5 months and 14 days, or 281 months 14 days, passed between the births of Margaret's first child William Henley Baldwin on 19 March 1856, and her last child Charles Nelson Baldwin on 2 September 1879, excluding the day that Charles was born. Including Sarah (Sarah J., Mary J.) and the unnamed son, Margaret had 13 children, which means 12 intervals, which comes out around 23.4 months, which means an average of roughly 2 years between children.

Robust and healthy

Whether Margaret had 12, 13, or 14 children, she was by every measure a successful breeder. She also appears to have been a very robust and healthy woman, who went on to live over 76 years -- a full 32 years, 9 months, and 2 days after giving birth to her last child when she was 44.

Poor Valley

Poor Valley is immediately north of present-day Pennington Gap, the most populous town in Lee County, Virginia, at the junction of U.S. Route 58A and U.S. Route 421. Lee County is the westernmost county of what is now called Southwest Virginia. U.S. 421 runs north through Poor Valley, then west and northwest to Harlan, over the Tennessee Valley Divide on what is today a 25-mile, 30-minute drive.

Northbound U.S. 421 out of Pennington Gap is called "Harlan Rd". Immediately on the northern outskirts of the town, U.S. 421 begins to run along the North Fork of the Powell River, from which it is called the "New Harlan Rd". The road, and the river, cross Poor Valley and the junctions of "Left Poor Valley Rd" and "Right Poor Valley Rd" to the west and east of U.S. 421 and the river. Pennington Gap did not have a post office until 1891. Poor Valley addresses today are within the Pennington Gap postal area.

I would guess that John R. Baldwin and his Howard-sister families farmed somewhere in the Poor Valley basin to the east or west of the river. There seems to have been considerable travel between Poor Valley and Harlan, hence the course of U.S. 421 between Pennington Gap and Harlan today.

However, the 1860 census enumerates the Baldwin-Howard household in the Jonesville Post Office area, which today is 8 miles (10 minutes) west of Pennington Gap. The household includes John R. Baldwin's younger brother Thomas N. Baldwin, who was then 16. Born on 29 October 1843, Thomas was 17 when he enlisted the following year, on 22 May 1861, in the 37th Virginia Infantry -- in Rose Hill, which is roughly 16 miles or 20 minutes further west of Jonesville by car today. See Thomas N. Baldwin in the "Civil War" section for details about his Civil War service.

Where did people residing in Poor Valley in 1860 go for their mail -- if Pennington Gap did not then have a post office?
Did the "Jonesville Post Office" catchment in 1860 include Poor Valley, which would have been roughly 10 miles away?

Enter John F. Howard

Of interest here is the fact that John R. Baldwin's father-in-law John F. Howard owned tracts of land in Poor Valley. These and other tracts he owned were listed among his assets in Lee County Chancery Court records concerning law suits brought against Howard for debt. See Creditors vs. Howard (above) for images and other details.

Top  

10.4 William Henley Baldwin and Nancy Jane Robbins

William Henley Baldwin William Henley Baldwin (1856-1937)
and Nancy Jane Robbins (1869-1945)

Occasion, place, and date unknown
Image from B.J. Baldwin Rudder
William Henley Baldwin William Henley Baldwin

William Henley Baldwin and Nancy Jane Robbins
Occasion, place, and date unknown
Above Monochrome and colorized photos
Below Crop of William Henley Baldwin
Copped from B.J. Baldwin Rudder
Baldwin Genealogy Group

William Henley Baldwin
Samuel Berten Baldwin Certificate of Death, Samuel Berten Baldwin
Died in Northern Idaho Sanitarium in Orofino
where his cousin Ida Mae Wetherall (1891-1923),
a daughter of N. Bascom and M. Ellen Baldwin,
died on 2 April 1923
For Ida Mae Wetherall's story see
2. Wetherall-Baldwin-Van Houton families
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Samuel Berten Baldwin Elsie Baldwin's headstone in Clearwater Cemetery
Kooskia, Idaho County, Idaho
Photograph by GRL copped from Find a Grave

William Henley Baldwin

  1. William Henley Baldwin was born in Virginia on 19 March 1856.
  2. Nancy Jane Robbins was born in Jackson County, Kentucky, on 30 May 1859, to Matilda Goldsmith and J. Alex Robbins.
  3. The Baldwin-Howard family moves from Virginia to Kentucky around 1863.
  4. The 1870 census for the Gray Hawk Post Pffice area of Sturgeon Precinct No. 6 in Jackson County shows "William H. Baldwin" 14 with his parents "John R. Baldwin" 41 and "Margaret" 35, his older siblings "John M." 18 and "Mary E." 17 (Rebecca's children), and his younger siblings "Robert E." 12, "Newton B." 8, "James A." 6, "Elihu J." 3, "Henry C." 2 (Margaret's children) -- plus "James V. Howard" 23, a farm laborer, and "Sarah E. Thomas" 14, a domestic servant. John M., William H. and Robert E. were also farm laborers. All the Baldwin's were born in Virginia except Margaret and the three youngest children James A., Elihu J., and Henry C. James V. Howard the Sarah E. Thomas were born in Virginia.
  5. William H. Baldwin and Nancy J. Robbins marry in Jackson County, Kentucky, on 25 January 1875.
  6. The 1880 census for Pond Creek, Jackson County, shows "William Baldwin" with his wife "Nancy J.", son "Robert F." 4, daughter "Mary E." 2, and son "John M." 10/12 July. He is a "laborer" and she is "keeping house". The same enumeration sheet includes the household of his parents John R. and Margaret Baldwin and all 9 younger siblings from Newton B. (19) to Charles N. (8/12 Sept), and also the household of Elizabeth Steele and her two youngest children John W. (22) and Martha E. (15), who later married N.B. Baldwin.
  7. Baldwin-Robbins family left Kentucky no later than January 1890 and first set foot in Idaho no later than March 1896, if received dates and places of birth of their children are reliable.
    1. See Baldwin-Howard children who went west for speculation about
      the movements of the Baldwin-Robbins family after it left Kentucky.
  8. The 1900 census for Mount Idaho Precinct in Idaho County, in Idaho, shows "William" 44, Mar 1856, with his wife "Nancy" 40, May 1860, and 9 children -- sons Robert 24, Oct 1875, William 19, May 1881, and James 16, July 1883; daughter Mollie 14, Sept 1885; sons Jesse 13, Apr 1887, David 10, Jan 1890 and Burton 7, Aug 1892; and daughters Elsie 4, Mar 1896, and Bertha 2, Feb 1898 -- plus a boarder, Joseph Harrison 78, Dec 1821. William the father is a "Farmer" on a farm he owned, and his oldest son Robert is a "Farm Laborer" presumably helping his father. All children from William the son down to and including David are "At school". Both parents were 23 when they married. Nancy has had 13 children of whom 10 survive. Among the 3 children in the 1880 census, Robert is still with his parents in this census, Mary has died, and John M. has married and established a household elsewhere. Two other childen born after the 1880 census have died.
    1. William Baldwin was born in Kentucky to a Virginia-born father and Kentucky-born mother.
      Nancy was born in Kentucky to North Carolina-born parents.
      All children were born in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents.
  9. The 1910 census for Saline [struck out] Township 1 in Delaware County in Oklahoma shows "William H. Baldwin" with his wife "Nancy J." 50 and 3 children -- "David" 20, "Samuel B." 17, and "Bertha L." 12. William H. is a farm laborer working out on his own account. David and Samuel B. are farm laborers working out for wages. The Baldwins have been married for 35 years. Nancy J. has had 15 children of whom 10 had survived. The Baldwins are living on Rear Wood Avenue in a mortgaged home on a farm.
    1. Elsie, born in March 1896 according to the 1900 census, when she is 4 years old, should be 14 years in this census. A headstone in Clearwater Cemetery in Kooskia, Idaho County, Idaho, reads "Elsie Baldwin / 1894-1907 / AGE: 10 YRS" (Find a Grave).
    2. William H. was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents.
      Nancy J. was born in Kentucky to a North Carolina-born father and South Carolina-born mother.
    3. 1875 William and Nancy marry in Kentucky
      1875-1887 Children from Robert to Jesse born in Kentucky (other sources)
      1890 David born in Arkansas (1910 census)
      1892 Samuel B. born in Missouri (1910 census)
      1894 George Gideon born in Indian Territory (see below)
      1894 Mary Elizabeth Baldwin married Siner Parmurus Collins in Indian Territory (see below)
      1896 Elsie born in Indian Territory? Oregon?
      1898 Bertha L. was born in Oregon (1910 census)
      1900 Baldwin-Robbins family in Mount Idaho, Idaho County, Idaho (1900 census)
    4. "Samuel B. Baldwin" 17 is also enumerated as "Bert Baldwin"
      in the household of his brother John M. Baldwin in Stites, Idaho
      (see above).
      The datum for the 1910 census is 15 April.
      The Stites, Idaho census was enumerated on 20 April.
      The Delware County census was enumerated on 10 May.
      Bert Baldwin had 20 days to travel from Idaho to Oklahoma.
    5. "Saline" was a town in Delaware County. It appears on a 1905 map associated with a proposal to incorporate Indian Territory as a state called Sequoyah. See Indian Territory and Oklahoma under Maps for details.
  10. The 1920 census for Stites Village (Sites Precinct) in Idaho County, Idaho, shows "W. H. Baldwin" 63 with his wife "N. J." 60 and their daughter "Bertha" 21. They are renting a home on Main Street. W.H. is a laborer in the forest reserve. Bertha, single, is a telephone operator.
    1. W.H. Baldwin was born in Virginia to "United States"-born parents.
      N.J. was born in Kentucky to a North Carolina-born father and South Carolina-born mother.
      Bertha was born in Oregon.
  11. The 1930 census for Stites Precinct in Idaho County, Idaho, shows "N. H. Baldwin" 74 with his wife "Nancy J." 70 and their son "Bert" 34. W.H. was 19 and Nancy J. was 15 when they were married. Bert -- i.e., "Burton" (1900) aka "Samuel B." (1910), but as "Samuel Bertern" on his death certificate -- is single and a laborer in the "Forest Service".
    1. N.H. Baldwin was born in Kentucky to Virginia-born parents.
      Nancy J. was born in Kentucky to North Carolina-born parents.
      Bert was born in Missouri.
    2. Samuel is "S" (Single). In fact "Bert Baldwin" married "Minnie Andrews" on 24 October 1916 in Stites, Idaho County, Idaho, and his death certificate, dated half a year after the 1930 census, states that he was "Divorced". Given the cause of his death, he was probably living with his parents because he had lost his bearings in life.
  12. Samuel Berten Baldwin, born on 26 August 1893 in Seneca, Missouri according to his death certificate, died on 29 October 1930 at Northern Idaho Sanitorium in Orofino in Clearwater County, Idaho, of "Exhaustion of manic depressive psychosis" with "Broncho-pneumonia" as a contributory cause. His 1st cousin Ida Mae (Baldwin) Wetherall died in the same Idaho-state mental institution on 2 April 1923.
  13. William H. Baldwin died on 15 February 1937 in Stites. He is buried in Stites IOOF Cemetery in Stites, Idaho County, Idaho.
  14. Nancy Jane Baldwin died on 8 June 1945 at the age of 86 years 9 days in Stites, Idaho, of "Exhaustion" due to an "Asthmatic attack" that persisted for a week, according to a death certificate informed by her son John M. Baldwin. She was to be buried on 12 June 1945 in Stites Cemetery, according to the death certificate, which was filed the day before.

Baldwin-Robbins Children

William H. Baldwin and Nancy J. Robbins appear to have had at least 13 and as many as 15 children of whom 10 survived.

 0. William Henley Baldwin  19 Mar 1856  15 Feb 1937
 0. Nancy Jane Robbins      30 May 1859   8 Jun 1945

 1. Robert Finley        30 Oct 1875   30 Nov 1921
      Born in Moores Creek, Kentucky
      Died in Stites, Idaho
      Image of Jackson County, Kentucky birth roll
        shows Robt. F. Baldwin, Jackson County, Kentucky
        Father William Baldwin, Lee County, Virginia
        Mother Nancy J. Robbins, Jackson County, Kentucky
      Image of State of Idaho Certificate of Death
        shows that "Robert Finlay Baldwin"
        died 30 November 1921 in Stites, Idaho
        Cause of death
          Chronic rheumatism
          Gradual general decline,
          Most joints fixed
        Occupation "Invalid"
        Born 30 October 1875, Kentucky
        Father Wm. Baldwin born in Kentucky
        Mother Nancy Jane Robbins born in Kentucky
        Informant Mary Baldwin [wife]

 2. Mary Elizabeth       7 Jul 1877   14 Oct 1937 
      Born in Moores Creek, Kentucky
      Died in Stites, Idaho
      See "Baldwin-Collins" (below)
 
 3. John Milton         16 Jul 1879   26 Nov 1973
      Born in Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
      Died in Lewiston, Nez Perce County, Idaho

1880 census shows the above 3 children

 1. Robert Finley       30 Oct 1875   30 Nov 1921
      Born in Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
      Died in Stites, Idaho County, Idaho

 4. William Alexander   28 May 1881   27 Jun 1956
      Born in Moore's Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
      Died in Spokane, Spokane County, Washington

 5. Alfred James        21 Jul 1884   15 Sep 1971
      Born in Clay County, Kentucky
      Married Sarah Ella Sense (1885–1948) in Clearwater
        in Idaho County, Idaho, on 16 September 1902
      Died in Kooskia, Idaho County, Idaho, 
      Buried in Tahoe Cemetery in Kooskia
      ??? On Tahoe Ridge in Kooskia ???

 6. Martha Ellen        20 Sep 1885   15 Jan 1967
      Born in Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky.
      The 1900 census for Clearwater Precinct, Idaho County, Idaho
        shows "George York" 18, born Aug 1881, a farm laborer,
        with his father and mother, and 1 older 9 younger siblings.
        The York family had moved from Arkansas to Idaho.
        between July 1888 and April 1890. 
        The oldest of the 11 children was born in Tennessee.
     "Martha Baldwin" married Arkansas-born "Virgil York" (1881–1969)
       in Idaho County, Idaho, on 9 Dec 1902.
     The 1910 Census for Newsome Precinct in Idaho County, Idaho
       shows "Mary E." 24, born in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents,
       as the wife of "Virgil G. York" 28, born in Arkansas
       to a Georgia-born father and a Tennessee-born mother.
       Virgil is farming on a general farm he owns with a mortage.
       They have been married 7 years and 2 of 3 children survive.
    The Yorks appear to have arrived in British Columbia, Canada, on 21 Apr 1917.
    "Martha Ellen York" died on 15 Jan 1967 in Campbell River, British Columbia, Canada.
    Virgil George, born on 6 Aug 1881 at Fort Smith, Sebastian, Arkansas,
      died on 12 July 1969 at Campbell River Hospital, British Columbia, Canada.
    The Yorks are buried under a common headstone in Courtenay Civic Cemetery,
      Courtenay, Comox Valley Regional District, British Columbia, Canada.

 7. Jesse Marion         6 Apr 1887   25 Jan 1960
      Born in Clay County, Kentucky
      Born in Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky
      Died in Grangeville, Idaho County, Idaho
      Married Blanche Andrews (1895–1981), 5 Aug 1912, Idaho County, Idaho

 8. David Earl          23 Jan 1890          1940
      Born in Clay County, Kentucky

 9. Samuel Berten       26 Aug 1892   29 Oct 1930
      Born in Seneca, Newton County, in southwest corner of Missouri
      "Bert Baldwin" married "Minnie Andrews"
        on 24 Oct 1916 in Stites, Idaho County, Idaho
      Died in Orofino, Clearwater County, Idaho
        Death Certificate states 26 Aug 1893 birth
      "Bert G. Baldwin" buried in
        Stites IOOF Cemetery, Idaho County, Idaho

Seneca is in the southwest corner of Missouri,
which shares a border with the northeast corner of Indian Territory,
which became the eastern part of Oklahoma in 1907.

10. George Gideon             1894          1894
      Born in Blue Springs in Gideon near Tahlequah
      in northeast corner of Indian Territory

11. Elsie                 Mar 1896          1907
      Born in Oregon
      Died in Stites or Kooskia, Idaho County, Idaho ???
      Buried in Clearwater Cemetery in Kooskia, Idaho County, Idaho
        Inscription "Elsie Baldwin / 1894-1907 / AGE: 10 YRS"

12. Bertha Leona        7 Feb 1898   15 Dec 1980
      Born in Jarvis, Oregon
      Married Ernest Alton Heter 23 Aug 1920
        1930 census for "Village Stites, Idaho County, Idaho" shows
          "Earnest A. Heter" (31) and "Bertha B." (31)
          both born in Oregon and 21 years old when married
          Earnest was a laborer in logging industry
        1940 census for "Village Stites, Idaho County, Idaho" shows
          "Earnest A. Heter" (41) and "Bertha M." (41) with
          daughter "Flora" (5) and mother-in-law "Nancy J. Baldwin" (80), a widow
          Earnest, Bertha, and Nancy completed 8, 10 (H2), and 7 years of school
          Both Earnest and Bertha born in Oregon, Nancy in Kentucky
          Earnest was a laborer in the Forest Service
      Died in Grangeville, Idaho County, Idaho
      Buried in Prairie View Cemetery, Grangeville, Idaho
      Shares "Heter" tombstone
      as "Bertha M. / Baldwin / 1898-1981"
      with "Earnest A. / 1898-1973"
      Inscription in double heart below cupid
      "Married / Aug. 23, 1920"

13. Child who did not survive

The 1900 census states that 10 of 13 children had survived.
The census enumerates 9 children of whom only Robert was on the 1880 census.
Mary E. on 1880 census has married.
So among the 11 named children, John M. has died.
This leaves 2 children unaccounted for.
1 of the missing children appears to have been George Gideon.
His middle name seems to signify the place where
he appears to have been born and died the same year.

The 1910 census states that 10 of 15 children had survived.
If true, then 2 more children, perhaps twins, are unaccounted for.

Top  


Baldwin headstones Baldwin headstones

Left"Collins" headstone shared by "Lizzie M." (1877-1937) and "S. Parr" (1873-1935)
"RESTING IN HOPE OF A GLORIOUS RESURRECTION"
RightAda Violet (Collins) Griner's headstone
"AWAITING THE VOICE OF JESUS"
Pine Grove Cemetery, Kooskia, Idaho County, Idaho
Photographs by Larry Linehan copped from Find a Grave

Collins-Baldwin family

Mary Elizabeth Baldwin and Siner Parmurus Collins

The family of Mary Elizabeth "Lizzie" Baldwin -- the oldest of the surviving children of William Henley Baldwin and Nancy Jane Robbins -- is especially interesting to me because a third-cousin once removed descends from this line. The line also dramatizes the difficulties of making sense of documents full of spelling variations and contradictory place-of-birth and other information.

  1. Mary Elizabeth Baldwin was born on 7 July 1877 in Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky, the 1st child of William Henley Baldwin and Nancy Jane (Robbins) Baldwin.
  2. "Elizabeth Baldwin" of Tahlequah married "P. Collins" of Tahlequah on 11 November 1894 in Indian Territory. Tahlequah had been the center of the Cherokee Nation, and it became the seat of Cherokee County when the county was established in 1907. Indian Territory and Oklahoma Territory became the state of Oklahoma in 1907.
  3. The 1900 census for Mt. Idaho, Idaho County, Idaho shows "Sinner Collins" 28, Jan 1872, with his wife "Elizabeth" 22, July 1877, and "John Baldwin" 22, July 1899, a boarder. Sinner [sic = Siner] was born in Arkansas to an Arkansas-born father and Georgia-born mother. Both Elizabeth and John were born in Kentucky to a Virginia-born father and Kentucky-born mother. Sinner and Elizabeth had been married 6 years but Elizabeth had borne no children. Sinner is a farmer on a farm he owns free of mortgage. John -- Elizabeth's younger brother John Milton Baldwin -- is a farm laborer. Lower on the same enumeration sheet is the household of Elizabeth's uncle "Sam Baldwin" 25, May 1875, with his wife "Nancy J." 25, Feb 1875, and their daughter "Cora M." 8/12, Sept 1899. Sam and Nancy had been married 4 years and Nancy had had only 1 child. Sam is a farm laborer.
  4. The 1910 census for Township 1 of Delaware County in Oklahoma shows "Sinner P. Collins" 37 with his wife "Mary Elizabeth" 32 and 5 children -- Leona 9, William C. 7, Edward J. 6, Pearl C. 4, and Elsie M. 2. Sinner P. is a "Relaster" (?) [lineman boot relaster?] for the "Telephone Co." for wages. The family was living on Tahlequah Street. The Baldwin-Robbins family of Mary Elizabeth's parents William Henley Baldwin and Nancy Jane Robbins is enumerated on the previous sheet of the same Delaware County township. The Mary Elizabeth and Sinner P. had been married for 14 years, and Mary was said to have given birth ot 6 children, all of whom survived.
    1. The census shows only 5 children. Either the "6/6" is was an error for "6/5" -- or includes the child she had born on 7 May 1910 in Kansas in Delaware County, Oklahoma. The census was enumerated on 11 May 1910 but the datum for the census was 15 April 1910. The name of the child born on 7 May 1910 was "Ada Violet Collins". Though born by the enumeration, she was born after the datum, so her birth and survival should not have been counted.
    2. See Indian Territory and Oklahoma under Maps for political and geographical details.
  5. A transcription (not a scan) of a Nez Perce County, Idaho record, states that "Mary E. Baldwin" married "Sinner P. Collins" in Nez Perce County, Idaho, on 12 February 1914. This is nearly 20 years after the same couple -- assuming it is the same couple -- married in Indian Territory in what was to become part of Oklahoma.
  6. The 1930 census for "Village Stites" in Idaho County in Idaho shows "M.E. Baldwin" 49, widowed, working as a "servant" in a "private home". She is only member of her household, in a home that she owned. The census states that she was born in Kentucky to a Virginia-born father and Kentucky born mother, and was age 16 when first married.
    1. If born on 7 July 1877 and married on 11 November 1894, she was 18. The Marriage License issued on 8 November 1896 for The United States, Indian Territory, First Judicial Division, states that "P. Collins" was 21 and "Elizabeth Baldwin" was 18.
    2. "M.E. Collins" in the 1930 census was a widow, but Siner Parmurus Collins died in 1935. His death certificate, however, states that he was divorced. If "M.E. Collins" is Mary Elizabeth Baldwin, then possibly she and S.P. Collins divorced before the 1930 census and socially she preferred being "widowed" to "divorced".
  7. A death certificate filed in Stites, Idaho County, Idaho, for "Siner Parmenus (?) Collins", born in "Don't know / Missouri", divorced husband of "Mary E. Collins", states that he died of "Cerebral hemorrhage" on 21 September 1935 and would be buried in Kooskia, Idaho County, on 22 September 1935. The informant was his son "William Collins".
    1. Siner Parmurus Collins (1873-1935) was born on 3 June 1873 in Missouri. He was also known as "Parr" and "S. Parr" and "S.P." Collins.
  8. Mary Elizabeth Collins died on 14 October 1937 in Idaho County, Idaho. She is buried in Pine Grove Cemetery in Kooskia, Idaho County, Idaho.
  9. "Lizzie M. Collins" and "S. Parr Collins" share a headstone in Pine Grove Cemetery in Kooskia, Idaho County, Idaho.

Collins-Baldwin children

  1. Mary Elizabeth Baldwin (1877-1937) was born on 7 July 1877 in Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky, the 1st child of William Henley Baldwin and Nancy Jane (Robbins) Baldwin. Elizabeth Baldwin married P. Collins in Indian Territory on 11 November 1894. She died on 14 October 1937 in Idaho County, Idaho, and is buried as "Lizzie M." with "S. Parr" in Pine Grove Cemetery in Kooskia, Idaho County.
  2. Siner Parmurus Collins (1873-1935) was born on 3 June 1873 in Missouri. P. Collins married Elizabeth Baldwin in Indian Territory on 11 November 1894. He died in Stites, Idaho County, Idaho on 21 September 1935 and is buried as "S. Parr" with "Lizzie M." in Pine Grove Cemetery in Kooskia, Idaho County.
  3. Barbara Leona Collins was born in 27 January 1901 and died on 4 September 1988. She married Lewis Harrington (1891–1966). They are buried together in Pine Grove Cemetery in Kooskia, Idaho County, Idaho.
  4. William Clayton Collins was born in Stites, Idaho County, Idaho on 1 December 1902 and married Pearl Anna York (1909-1995) in 1924. He died on 2 March 1990 in Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, and is buried in Pine Grove Cemetery in Kooskia. She is buried in Spokane.
  5. James Edward Collins, born 29 Aug 1904, died 18 Aug 1988. Aka "James E." and "Edward J.". He was born in Stites, lived in in Kooskia, married Greeta Anna Decouvery in Idaho County (Stites, Kooskia) on 15 September 1924, died in Spokane, and is buried as "J. Edward Collins" (1904-1988) in Normal Hill Cemetery in Lewiston, Idaho.
  6. Pearl S. Collins (1906-1997) married Ned Elias Wilson (1909–1997), a maintenance man for the Camus Prairie Railroad. They are buried together in Lewis-Clark Memorial Gardens in Lewiston, Idaho
  7. Elsie May Collins (1907–1999) married first Ben Bickle (1901-1987, m1924) then Clarence Virgil Dygert (1911-1998). They are buried near each other in Lewis and Clark Memorial Cemetery in Lewiston, Idaho.
  8. Ada Violet Collins was born in Kansas in Delaware County, Oklahoma, on 7 May 1910, according to a marriage certificate. She died on 8 September 1993 in Nampa in Canyon County, Idaho, and is buried in Pine Grove Cemetery in Kooskia, Idaho County, Idaho.
    1. Ada appears to have married 3 times. As "Ada V. Collins" she first married "Philip [sic = Phillip] [Edward] Griner" (1908-1978) on 6 July 1926 in Idaho County, Idaho. Phillip was born in 1908, died in 1978, and is also buried in Pine Grove Cemetery in Kooskia.
    2. On 15 February 1984, Ada Violet Grimer (72) married John E. Broneske (72), according to a marriage license issued the day before in Missoula in Missoula County, Montana. It was her 3rd marriage (divorced) and his 2nd (widowed). Both were then residing in Cataldo in Kootenai County in Idaho.
    3. The 1930 census for Lorena Precinct in Idaho County, Idaho, show "Phillip E. Griener" 23 with his wife "Ada V." 19 and 2 children -- "Donna G." 2-5/12 and "Wilton C." 1-6/12. Phillip's father "Phillip S." 60 is also residing in the household. Phillip and Ada 20 and 16 when they married in what is the 1st marriage for each. He was born in Idaho to a Pensylvania-born father and Oregon-born mother. She was born in Oklahoma to an Arkansas-born father and Kentucky-born mother. Phillip and his father are laborers at a "Pole camp", which seems to be a common occupation among local people.
    4. Ada and Phillip appear to have had the following 8 children.
      1. Donna Gene Griner
        Born 25 Oct 1927, Harpstar, Idaho
        Married Walter Wayne Fitzgerald 25 May 1947
        Died 8 Dec 2010, Worley, Kootenai County, Idaho
      2. Weldon Carl Griner
        Born 19 May 1928, Harpster, Idaho County, Idaho
        Married Shirley E. Pemble 12 Jun 1950 (later divorced)
        Died 31 Jan 2016, Kooskia, Idaho County, Idaho
      3. Nancy Alvina Griner
        Born 9 Jan 1932, Stites, Idaho County, Idaho
        Died 16 Feb 1933, Stites, Idaho County, Idaho
        An Idaho Certificate of Death states that "Nancy Alvina Griner" was born in Stites, Idaho County, Idaho on 9 January 1932 and died in Stites on 16 February 1933 -- 1 year 1 month and 7 days later -- of "Toxemia from extensive third degree burns on limbs and body." Her father "Phillip Griner" was born in "Idaho" and her mother "Ida Violet Collins" was born in "Illinois". The informant was "Phillip Griner". Nancy was buried in Pine Grove Cemetery in Kooskia on 18 February 1933. The certificate was filed on 9 March 1933.
      4. Violet Laverne [LaVerne] Griner
        Born 14 Feb 1934, Stites, Idaho County, Idaho
        Married Terry Emerson McGovern 2 Apr 1950 (later divorced)
        Died 25 Nov 2012, Santa, Benewah County, Idaho
      5. Phillip Ivan "Ike" Griner
        Born 13 Mar 1936, Stites, Idaho County, Idaho
        "Philip I. Griner" married Roma E. Harkness 30 Jan 1965 (later divorced)
        Bride and groom residing in Cataldo, Kootenai County, Idaho
        Married in Coeur d'Alene, Kootenai County, Idaho
        The couple had 5 children before divorcing
        Phillip Ivan Collins later "married a Columbian girl for a very short time" (obituary)
        Died 12 Jan 2018, Kellogg, Shoshone County, Idaho
        Preceded in death by 4 siblings "Carl, Donna, LaVerne, Nancy" and his parents
        Survived by 3 siblings "Royce & (Kay) Griner, Vonda & (Dennis) Woods, and Ronda & (Marv) Mason"
        In early 1990s he was indicted and convicted in case alleging "conspiracy to manufacture etc. cocaine from April of 1988 through September 20, 1990" in which "his principal role was to bring liquid cocaine from Colombia" according to "UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Phillip Ivan "Ike" GRINER, Defendant-Appellant, [Case] No. 93-30080, United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit" -- submitted 3 February 1994 and decided 11 February 1994, without hearing, against Griner.
      6. Raymond Royce Griner
        Born 24 Sep 1938, Kooskia, Idaho County, Idaho
        Married Carla L. Siria 26 December 1963
        He was residing in Cataldo, Kootenai County, Idaho
        She was residing in Spokane, Spokane County, Washingon
        They married in Sandpoint, Bonner County, Idaho
        1. Ray is this writer's (Bill Wetherall's) 3rd cousin.
          Ray's daughter Lisa is my 3rd cousin once removed.
          Lisa and my children are 4th cousins.
          Lisa's son and my grandchildren are 5th cousins.
      7. Vonda Griner, married Dennis Woods
      8. Ronda Griner, married Marv Mason

I have shown the above details about the Baldwin-Robbins family, and the descendant Collins-Baldwin and Griner-Collins families,
because they show the extent to which several members of these families shared the terrain of Idaho's panhandle counties with
my paternal Baldwin-Steele and Wetherall-Baldwin lines and my maternal Hunter-Thomas and Hardman-Hunter lines,
including my Wetherall-Hardman parents, who met and courted in Idaho but settled in California.

See Idaho Territory and Idaho under Maps for geographical and social particulars.

Top  

10.5 Robert Ewing Baldwin and Lydia Lutitia Ketron

10.5 Robert Ewing Baldwin and Eliza Jane King

Robert Ewing Baldwin Robert Ewing and Eliza Jane (King) Baldwin
Circa December 1895 if wedding portrait
Image from B.J. Baldwin Rudder
Robert Ewing Baldwin Robert Ewing Baldwin (1858-1942) and Eliza Jane (King) Baldwin (1873-1938)
Image from and caption by B.J. Baldwin Rudder
In other words, B.J. and Linda are "in-law" 2nd cousins
Lydia Baldwin 1895 Transcription of 6 September 1895 report on death of Lydia Baldwin of Moores Creek
Copped and cropped from images posted to by B.J. Baldwin Rudder
to Baldwin Genealogy Group (Facebook)
  1. Robert Ewing Baldwin born on 21 August 1858 in Lee County, Virginia.
  2. Eliza Jane King was born on 3 November 1873 in Kentucky, the daughter of a Kentucky-born father "Woody King" and a Kentucky-born mother "Josephine Nicols", according to her Commonwealth of Kentucky death certificate.
  3. The 1880 census for Pond Creek, Jackson County, shows "Robert Baldwin" (22) as the son-in-law of "Phiarzina Ketron" (57), who is widowed. Robert is listed after Phiarzina's son Nelson (17), and before his wife, Phiarzina's daughter "Liddia L." (31). Phiarzina is keeping house, Liddia is at home, and Nelson and Robert are laborers. Robert was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents.
  4. Lydia died in Kentucky on 23 August 1895 after internal injuries sustained when kicked by a horse while milking a cow (see report to right). She is buried as "Lydia L. Baldwin" in Wilson Cemetery in Moores Creek in Jackson County.
    1. Lydia Lutitia Ketron (1858–1895) was born in Tennessee on 21 August 1858 to Fairzina Smith (1825–1896) and Jacob Nelson Ketron (1807–1872). The 1870 census shows "Lydia Katron" (11) living with her parents and, one older and one younger brother, in the Gray Hawk Post Office area of Pond Creek Precinct No. 5, which is close to Moores Creek in the greater Pond Creek area.
  5. "R.E. Baldwin" married "Eliza J. King" in Jackson County, Kentucky, on 11 December 1895 -- less than 4 months after Lydia's death.
  6. The 1900 census for Pond Creek shows "Robert Baldwin" 41, Aug 1858, farming with his wife "Eliza" 26, Nov 1873, and 3 children, daughter Marget E. 3, Sept 1896, and sons "John W." 2, Nov 1897, and "James D." 1, Mar 1899. They have been married 4 years, and all 3 of Eliza's children have survived. Robert is farming on his own farm, and was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents.
  7. The 1910 census for Line Creek Road in Stepping Back Voting Precinct in Magisterial District 4 of Laurel County, Kentucky, lists "Robert E. Baldwin" 51 with his wife "Eliza J." 36 and 5 children, 2 daughters and 3 sons -- "Margaret E." 13, "John W." 12, "James D." 10, "Ollie J." 8, and "Robert S." 3. They have been married 14 years but it is his 2nd and her 1st marriage. She has given birth to 5 children, all of whom have survived and are accounted for in this census. Robert E. is a farmer on a general farm he owns free of mortgage. The oldest three children -- ages 13, 12, and 10 -- are farm laborers on a home farm -- presumably their father's. Robert E. was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents.
  8. The 1920 census for Dixie High Way in Precinct 2 of London, Laurel County, shows "Robert" 61 with his wife Eliza 46 and 2 children daughter "Ollie 18 and son Sterling 13 ["Robert S." in 1910 census). Robert is a farmer on a general farm and Sterling is a farm laborer on a home farm owned by his father mortgage free. Again, Robert is Virginia-born to Virginia-born parents.
  9. The 1930 census for the "Dixie Highway" in the First Magisterial District of Laurel County lists "Robert E." 72 with his wife "Eliza" 56 and their son "Robert S." 22. Robert E. is a farmer on a general farm and Robert S. is a high school teacher. The column for age at time of first marriage is blank for both Robert E. and Eliza.
  10. "Mrs. Eliza Baldwin" died in Laurel County, Kentucky, on 30 May 1938 from "Stomach cancer" according to her death certificate, informed by her father "Woody Baldwin".
    1. The Laurel County Court, on behalf of The Commonweath of Kentucky, issues an "Administrator's Bond" which appoints J.W. Baldwin "Administrator with will annexed of Eliza Baldwin deceased, intestate." His brothers Sterling Baldwin and J.D. Baldwin are parties to the convenant.
  11. The 1940 census for Magisterial District 1 of Laurel County, Kentucky, shows "R.E. Baldwin" 82, widowed, as the father of head of household "J.W. Baldwin" 42 and his wife "Della" 38, and 4 children ages 20 to 8. R.E. Baldwin finished 5 years of school. His son J.W. Baldwin, a miner, finished 8 years and Della finished 7 years of school. Kathleen, 20, finished 2 years of college and is teaching in a country school. All 3 sons (17, 14, and 8) are still in school.
  12. Robert Ewing Baldwin died in 1942.

Baldwin-King (Robert and Eliza) children

Robert Ewing Baldwin's 5 children with Eliza Jane King are as follows.

0. Robert Ewing Baldwin  21 Aug 1858          1942
0. Eliza Jane King        3 Nov 1873   30 May 1938
1. Margaret Ethel        27 Sep 1896   12 Mar 1991   Christopher Columbus Tipton
     Ethel M. Baldwin
     Valhalla Gardens of Memory and Mausoleum
     Belleville, St. Clair County, Illinois
2. John W.               18 Nov 1897   28 Oct 1967   Della Goins
     A.R. Dyche Memorial Park
     London, Laurel County, Kentucky
3. James Doney           24 Mar 1899    9 Oct 1982   Zula Ellen Nelson
4. Ollie Josephine       18 Dec 1901   26 Nov 2000   Edward Gum
5. Robert Sterling       31 Dec 1907   28 Jul 1972   Thelma Lee Vance
     A.R. Dyche Memorial Park
     London, Laurel County, Kentucky

James Doney Baldwin's line

0. John R. Baldwin and Margaret Howard
1. Robert Ewing Baldwin and Eliza Jane King
2. James Doney Baldwin and Zula Ellen Nelson
3. Robert Nelson Baldwin and Lula Jane Hurley
4. Judith Elaine Baldwin (Campbell)

Top  

10.6 Sarah Baldwin

Sarah Baldwin appears to have died shortly after her birth in Virginia in 1859.
The circumstances or her death are not known.
Presumably she was buried in Virginia.

An enumeration of deaths during the year prior to the date of the 1860 census -- also known as a "U.S. Federal Census Mortality Schedule" -- shows the following information (transcribed by me from an image of original enumeration sheet downloaded from (Ancestry.com).

Schedule 3: Persons who Died during the Year ending 1st June, 1860,
in the Western District in the County of Lee State of Virginia,
enumerated by me, Unread name, Ass't Marshal

[Note: underscored terms are handwritten]

Line number         28
Name                Sarah Baldwin
Age                 6/12 [years]
Sex                 F
Color *             Blank * (White, black, or mulatto)
Free or slave       Blank
Married or widowed  Blank
Place of birth      Lee [County] Va
Month person died   Oct [1859]
Profession, *       Blank * occupation, or trade
Disease *           Consumption * or cause of death
Number of days ill  15

This implies that Sarah was born about April 1859.

A transcription from "Virginia, Deaths and Burials Index, 1853-1917" reads as follows (Ancestry.com).

Name:             Sarah J Baldwin
Birth Date:       abt 1859
Birth Place:      Lee, Virginia
Death Date:       30 Oct 1859
Death Place:      Poor Valley, Lee, Virginia
Death Age:        4 Months 7 Days
Race:             White
Marital status:   Single
Gender:           Female
Father Name:      S. R. Baldwin [Sic = J. R. Baldwin?]
Mother Name:      Margaret Baldwin
FHL Film Number:  2048576

Finally, a transcription from an index titled "Virginia Births and Chistenings, 1584-1917" reads as follows (FamilySearch).

Name:           Mary J. Baldwin
Gender:         Female
Birth Date:     23 May 1859
Birthplace:     Lee, Virginia
Father's Name:  John R. Baldwin
Mother's Name:  Margaret Baldwin

Sarah, Sarah J., and Mary J. Baldwin

Is the "Sarah Baldwin" who died in October when 6 months old, the same "Sarah Baldwin" and "Sarah J. Baldwin" who died on 20 or 30 October when 4 months 7 days old? And could these three Sarahs also be the girl Christened "Mary J. Baldwin", who was born on 23 May 1859, and would have lived 5 months 7 days if she died on 30 October 1859?

See Margaret Baldwin's children (above) for images of records.

Top  

10.7 Unnamed Baldwin son

There is evidence that, in 1861, Margaret Baldwin gave birth to a son who seems to have died after being Christened -- though his name does not appear on the received transcription of the Christening record. There is ample birth-interval time in which such a child could have been born, on 23 December 1861, 12 months and 1 day before the birth on 24 December 1862 of this writer's great grandfather Newton Bascum Baldwin.

The following information is based on a transcription of an index titled "Virginia Births and Chistenings, 1584-1917" (FamilySearch).

Name:           Baldwin
Gender:         Male
Birth Date:     23 December 1861
Birthplace:     Poor Valley, Lee, Virginia
Race:           White
Father's Name:  John R. Baldwin

See Margaret Baldwin's children (above) for images of records.

Top  

10.8 Newton Bascum Baldwin and Martha Ellen Steele

See 10.8 Baldwin-Steele (above) and related links for all photographs, genealogical records, and family stories about N.Bascum and M. Ellen (Steele) Baldwin.

Top  

10.9 James Alfred Baldwin and Nancy Ann McGee

See 10.9 Baldwin-McGee (above) and related links for all photographs, genealogical records, and family stories about James Alfred Baldwin and Nancy Ann McGee.

Top  

10.10 Elihu Joseph Baldwin and Mollie Wilson

Elihu Joseph Baldwin Elihu Joseph Baldwin (1866-1942)
Occasion, place, date unknown
Ancestry.com photo posted by JLKShack
Elihu Joseph Baldwin Joseph and Mollie Baldwin with two children
Probably about 1922 if these are their youngest children
Joseph Robert (Joseph Jr.) born 1919 in Idaho
and Geroge M. born 1921 in Kentucky
Occasion and place unknown
Image from B.J. Baldwin Rudder
  1. Elihu Joseph Baldwin was born on 6 October 1866, apparently in Crab Orchard in Jackson County, Kentucky.
  2. The 1870 census for Gray Hawk post office in Sturgeon, Jackson County, Kentucky shows "Elihu J.", age 3, with his parents "John R. Baldwin" 41 and "Margaret" 35, and 7 of their 8 surviving siblings from "John M." 18 to "Henry C." 2 (see Baldwin-Howard chronology for details).
  3. The 1880 census for District 5 of Jackson County shows "John R. Baldwin" 51 with his wife "Margaret" 44 and 9 children from "Newton B." 19 to "Charles N." 8/12 months, including "Elihu J." 13. John R., and his 4 older sons including Elihu J., are laborers. John R. is said to have been born in Virginia to a Tennessee-born father and Virginia-born mother. Margaret is said to have been born in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents. Among their children, only Newton B. -- the oldest in this census -- was born in Virginia, shortly before the family moved to Kentucky, where James A. and the younger siblings were born.
  4. The 1890 census was destroyed in a fire.
  5. Mollie Wilson was born on 12 October 1893 in Laurel County, Kentucky, to Jack and Beckie Wilson.
  6. 1900 census
  7. 1910 census
  8. Elihu Joseph Baldwin married Mollie Wilson (1893–1946) on 29 December 1917 in London, Laurel County, Kentucky. The 1930 census states that he first married when 52 and she when 24 years old. Received dates of birth and marriage compute 51 and 24.
  9. 1920 census
  10. The 1930 census for the Second Civil District of Campbell, Tennessee, shows "Joseph" 63 with his wife "Mollie" 37 and 5 children -- "Joseph Jr." 11, "George" 9, "Ruby Lee" 6, "John B." 4, and "Clifford" 1. Joseph Jr. [Joseph Robert] was born in Idaho and Clifford was born in Tennessee. Elihu Joseph and Mollie, and the middle 3 children, were born in Kentucky, as were Mollie's parents. Elihu Joseph's father was born in Tennessee and his mother was born in Virginia. Joseph was a farmer working on a general farm on his own account, but apparently he did not own the farm, and he was renting his home. He was 52 when he first married and Mollie was 24, according to this census.
  11. 1940 census
  12. Joseph Baldwin died on 2 July 1942 in Jackson County, Kentucky.
  13. Mollie Baldwin died on 12 February 1946 in Rural E. Bernstadt in Laurel County, Kentucky, of "Myocarditis". The informant on her death certificate was "Joe Baldwin" -- her son.
  14. Both Elihu Joseph and Mollie are buried in Davidson Cemetery in Peoples, Jackson County, Kentucky, according to Find a Grave, whose as of this writing (November 2019) no images of monuments have been posted.

Baldwin-Wilson children

Joseph and Mollie had at least the following 6 children.

0. Elihu Joseph Baldwin   6 Oct 1866   2 Jul 1942
0. Mollie Wilson         12 Oct 1893  12 Feb 1946
1. Joseph Robert      6 Feb 1919   13 Oct 2004
     Married Meldia Harrison (1920–20079 in 1943
2. George M.         30 Mar 1921   23 Dec 2010
3. Ruby Lee          17 Jun 1923    3 Feb 2006
     Married Steve Woodrow Langlin (1914-1970)Smith
4. John Bernard      25 Aug 1925    7 Aug 1941 
     Born Whitney County, Kentucky
     Father "E.J. Baldwin", Mother "Mollie Wilson"
     Died Pittsburg, Laurel County, Kentucky
     "Meningococcal meningitis"
5. Charles Clifford   7 Jun 1928   22 Jun 1935
6. Thelma             4 Mar 1933   Stillborn
     "Stillbirth / Premature Separation of Placenta"
     Father "E. Joseph Baldwin", Mother "Mollie Wilson"

Top  

10.11 Henry Clay Baldwin and Malinda Abrams

Representative Henry Clay Baldwin Representative H. Clay Baldwin
Kentucky, 80th District, 1932-1933
(C.W. Baldwin Family photo)
Henry Clay and Linda Baldwin Henry Clay and Linda Baldwin
In their later years
(C.W. Baldwin Family photo)
Henry Clay Baldwin Henry Clay Baldwin's Death Certificate
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com

Henry Clay Baldwin (1867-1950) was the 10th child of John R. Baldwin and John R. Baldwin's 7th child with Margaret Howard. He appears to have been named after Henry Clay (1777-1852), who served Kentucky in both congressional houses in Washington for over nearly 40 years. Henry Clay was Speaker of the House of Representatives for three terms, and was President John Quincy Adams's Secretary of State (1825-1829), after which he himself ran for president three times (1824, 1832, 1844) but lost. He was namesake for "Clay County" in Kentucky, which is immediately to the southwest of Jackson County and to east of Laural County, which is immediately to the southwest of Jackson County. "Baldwin Branch Road" today, and the Terrell Creek area where Henry Clay Baldwin farmed, is near the tri-county junction of these three counties.

Henry Clay Baldwin -- commonly known as H. Clay or just Clay Baldwin -- appears in the following censuses and other records.

  1. Henry Clay Baldwin was born on 5 November 1867 in Laurel County, Kentucky, according to his death certificate, "Informant" box blank.
  2. Malinda Abrams was born on 18 August 1880 in Jackson County, Kentucky, the youngest of at least 9 children born to Stephen W. Abrams (1833-1920) and Susan Robinson (1836-1906), both born in Madison County, Kentucky. Malinda's parents married in 1858 in Jackson County, which shares a border with Madison County, and they raised their family and died in Jackson County.
  3. The 1870 census for Gray Hawk Post Office in Sturgeon Precinct No. 6, Jackson County, shows "Henry C.", age 2, with his father John R. Baldwin 41, a farmer, his mother Margaret 35, keeping house, and 7 older siblings -- John M. 18, Mary E. 17, William H. 14, Robert E. 12, Newton B. 8, James A. 6, and Elihu J. 3.
  4. The 1880 census for District 5 of Jackson County shows "Henry C.", age 12, living with his parents with his father John R. Baldwin 51, mother Margaret 44, and 8 older and younger siblings -- Newton B. 19, James A. 16, Elihur J. 13, Martha A. 9, George F. 7, Samuel L. B. 5, Archelus F. 3, and Charles N. 8/12. His father, himself, and all his older brothers are laborers, presumably on the family farm. Margaret is keeping house.
  5. "Henry Clay Baldwin" and "Malinda Abrams" married on 14 February 1898 in Jackson, Kentucky. The marriage ledger shows they were married at the home of Malinda's father Stephen Abrams (1833-1920) in Jackson County.
  6. The 1900 census for Magisterial District 3, Pond Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky shows "H. Clay Baldwin" 32, Nov 1867, with his wife "Lindy" 19, Aug 1880, and a son "Dewey H." 9/12, Aug 1899. H. Clay is farming on a farm he owns without mortgage. He and Linda have been married 2 years and she has had only 1 child. Clay's brother Robert E. Baldwin and his family are enumerated in the same group of households.
    1. The census shows H. Clay born in Kentucky to a Tennessee-born father and Virginia-born mother.
  7. The 1910 census for 3rd Magisterial District, Jackson County, Kentucky shows "H. Clay Baldwin" 42 with his wife "Malinda" 29 and 4 children -- "Dewey H." 9, "Chloe" 6, "Dan C." 4, and "Raleigh" 2. Clay and Malinda have been married 11 years and 4 of her 5 children are living. He is a farmer working on his own account on a general farm he owns without mortgage.
    1. H. Clay's household is enumerated on "Terrell Creek Road" immediately before the household of his brother "Charley Baldwin" 30, and the household of a presumed newphew "Bradley Baldwin" 21 with whom his mother "Margaret Baldwin" 78 is residing. Terrell Creek Road is enumerated immediately after Pond Creek Road.
    2. Both H. Clay and his brother Charley were born in Kentucky to a Tennessee-born father and Virginia-born mother.
  8. The 1920 census for District 3, part of Pond Creek Precinct 3, Jackson County, Kentucky, shows "Clay Baldwin" 52 with his wife "Linda" 39 and 7 children -- "Dewey H." 20, "Cloe" 16, "Carlos" 14, "Rollie" 12, "Ruby" 8, "Clarence" 5, and "Hobert Clay" 1-6/12. Clay is farming on his own account. Dewey, Carlos, and Rollie are helping him as farm laborers working for wages on a home farm.
    1. Everyone in the family is said to be born in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents.>.
  9. The 1930 census for Pond Creek District 3, Jackson County, Kentucky shows "Henry C. Baldwin" 61 and his wife "Linda H." 49 with 4 children -- "Ruby" 18, "Clarence D." 15, "Hobert C." 11, and "Edna M." 4-9/12. Henry C. and Linda H. were respectively 29 and 17 when they married. Henry is a farmer on a general farm working on his own account. Clarence is a labor[er] on a [general] farm -- probably his father's.
    1. Henry was born in Kenucky to United States-born parents. All others in the houshold were born in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents. It appears that Henry was certain only that his parents were born in America but uncertain about the states.
  10. The 1940 census for Magisterial District 3, Pond Creek, Jackson County, shows "Clay Baldwin" 72 with his wife "Linda" 59 and their daughter "Edna" 14. They are enumerated as residing in Annville and were living in the same house in 1935. No one in the household had had worked or had any income during 1939. Clay and Linda had finished 6 years and Edna 8 years of schooling.
  11. A postcard dated 21 September 1947 -- postmarked "Annville, Ky., Sep 22 1947 A.M. -- addressed to my parents by my father's aunt Sadie (Baldwin) Williams, N.B. Baldwin's oldest daughter -- relates the following account of her visit with Clay Baldwin during her pilgrimage back to Jackson County where she was born and raised and apparently bore a child or two who did not survive.
    1. Just seen a chicken die and Uncle Clay is in the sweet potato patch which means fried chicken and sweet potatoes for dinner with the usual hot biscuts. I came to uncle's three days ago and two chickens have died. I don't want a fuss made over me but the southern hospitality of my childhood hasn't changed. I know I won't have time to see all that I want to see. Haven't seen the old home place yet but will do that this week.
    2. Clay and Linda would die 3 years after Sadie's visit.
    3. See Sadie's old Kentucky home: Uncle Clay's southern hospitality under Sadie Williams (both above) for images of the postcard and other details about Sadie's 1947 trip back to Kentucky.
  12. A Commonwealth of Kentucky Certificate of Death shows that Henry Clay Baldwin died in Annville, Jackson County, on 7 March 1950 in Jackson County, Kentucky, of "Cardio-vascular failure" due to "Atherosclerotic heart dis. with Auricular fibrilation". He was a "Farmer rtd." born in "Laurel Co. Ky." on "11-5-1867" to "John Baldwin" and "Margaret" and had lived for 82 years 4 months and 2 days. The "Informant" box is blank. He was scheduled for burial on 9 March 1950 in Medlock Cemetery in Annville.
  13. Malinda passed away on 16 May 1950, just 70 days after Clay.
  14. "H. Clay" and "Linda" share a common "Baldwin" tombstone in Medlock Cemetery in Annville, Jackson County, Kentucky.

Baldwin-Abrams children

Henry Clay Baldwin and Malinda Abrams had at least the following 9 children.

0. Henry Clay Baldwin   5 Nov 1867   7 Mar 1950  "Clay" 
0. Malinda Abrams      18 Aug 1880  16 May 1950  "Linda" "Lindie"

1. Dewey Herbert  10 Aug 1899  1 Nov 1980
     Born in Jackson County, Kentucky
     Married Birdie Marcum (1904-1982)
     Died in Hamilton, Butler County, Ohio
     D.H. Baldwin is my maternal grandmother Ida Mae Baldwin's 1st cousin
       D.H. Baldwin's son Orville Richard Baldwin (1925-2000)
       is my father William B. Wetherall's 2nd cousin.
         O.R. Baldwin's son C.W. Baldwin
         is my (William O. Wetherall's) 3rd cousin.
         C.W. Baldwin, through both Ancestry.com and email,
         shared images of several original photographs in his collection
         and some information about his Baldwin-Abrams line
         (see Uncle Clay above).
2. Postulated child who did not survive
3. Chloe          18 Jul 1903   5 Jul 1926  Medlock
     Born and died in Jackson County, Kentucky
     Married Robert "Bob" Lee Medlock (1903–1994)
4. Donald Carlos  23 Dec 1905   2 Jan 1987
     Born in Kentucky
     Married Mattie Abrams (c1906–?)
     Died in Cincinatti, Hamilton County, Ohio
5. Raleigh        20 Mar 1908   3 Sep 1994  "Rollie"
     Born in Jackson, Kentucky
     Died in London, Laurel County, Kentucky
6. Ruby            9 Oct 1911  ?
     Born in Jackson County, Kentucky
7. Clarence Dan   30 Jun 1914   3 Aug 2003
     Born in Jackson County, Kentucky
     Died in Fairfield, Butler County, Ohio
     "Clarence D." was called "Uncle Ted"
     according to his great newphew C.W. Baldwin
8. Hobert Clay    12 Jul 1918  17 Jun 2008
     Born in Jackson County, Kentucky
     Died in Fairfield, Butler County, Ohio
9. Edna B.        27 Jun 1925  14 Sep 2015
     Born in Annville, Jackson County, Kentucky
     Married Phillip A. Evans (1924-1995)
     Died in Fairfield, Butler County, Ohio
     Both are buried in Rose Hill Burial Park,
       Hamilton, Butler County, Ohio
     1930 census has "Edna M. Baldwin"
     1940 census has "Edna Baldwin"
     Edna's headstone has "Edna B. Evans"

Top  

H. Clay Baldwin as a politician

Henry Clay Baldwin as politician Click on the image to enlarge
Representative H.C. Baldwin
Kentucky, 71st District, 1896-1897
(C.W. Baldwin Family)

The color of the above image is as received.
The image appears to be a scan of a collage
that has been colored with photo editor.

H.C. Baldwin

Henry Clay Baldwin (1867-1950), though mainly a farmer, was also a teacher, lawyer, and legislator, according to Herringshaw's Encyclopedia of American Biography of the Nineteenth Century, published in 1898 (right). The same who's who publication includes W. Godfrey Hunter, who H.C. Baldwin knew as Dr. W.G. Hunter (below). It also includes several other politicians who played key roles in the 1897 fight in the Kentucky General Assembly over who would fill a vacant senatorial seat in Washington.

In 1895, H.C. Baldwin, as a Republican from Owsley County, was elected to the State House of Representatives as the representative of the 71st District of Kentucky for the 1896-1897 term. In 1931, he was elected as a Republican from Jackson County to represent the 80th District for the 1932-1933 term. At some point, H.C. Baldwin also ran for the office of County Attorney for Jackson County. Jackson County, immediately to the west of Owsley County, was originally formed out of Owsley County in 1858.

The 1880 census shows "Henry C." (12) living in Jackson County with his parents, "John R. Baldwin" (51) and "Margaret" (44), his older brother "Newton B. Baldwin" (19), and younger siblings, brothers James A. (16) and Elihur J. (13), sister Martha A. (9), and brothers George F. (7), Samuel L. B. (5), Archelus F. (3), and Charles N. (8/12). Henry, his father, and all his older brothers are enumerated as laborers, presumably on the family farm.

H.C. Baldwin, if a school teacher for 7 years before his election in 1895, apparently began teaching from about 1888, when he would have been around 20 or 21 years old. He seems to have married Malinda Abrams about 1898 (1900 census), shortly after his 1896-1897 stint in the state legislature, when he was 29 and Linda was 17 (1930 census). However, the 1940 census shows "Clay Baldwin" (72) and "Linda" (59) as having completed only 6 years of education.

Dr. W. G. Hunter

W.G. Hunter, W. Godfrey Hunter, or more fully Whiteside Godfrey Hunter (1841-1917), was born in Ireland and migrated to the United States in 1858. He studied medicine in Philadelphia and served as a surgeon in the Union Army during the Civil War, when he settled in Kentucky. After the war, he served in the Kentucky State House of Representatives in Frankfort, before becoming active in national politics as a Republican.

Hunter was a Republican representative for Kentucky in the United States House of Representatives in the 50th Congress (1887-1889) [3rd Congressional District of Kentucky], the 54th Congress (1895-1897) [3rd District], and the 58th Congress (1903-1905) [11th District]. He was defeated in the 1892 and 1896 congressional representative elections.

When Kentucky failed to elect a congressional senator in 1896, he became a contender in the 1897 fight in the Kentucky General Assembly over who would fill the vacant senatorial seat in Washington. Despite the support of H.C. Baldwin and others, he failed to get the nod. But U.S. President William McKinley (1843-1901), America's 25th president, who had supported Hunter's bid for the senatorial post, appointed him to serve as America's Minister to Guatemala, a position he held from 1897 to 1902, a year after McKinley's assassination during the 1st year of his 2nd term.

The senatorial fight in Kentucky

During the winter and into the spring of 1896-1897, the political chaos in Frankfort, Kentucky, captured headlines in newspapers across the United States, from The New York Times to The San Francisco Call (see examples of stories from their March editions to right).

In 1896, an incumbent Democratic senator from Kentucky, Joseph Clay Stiles Blackburn (1838-1918), sought re-election to a 3rd term, against St. John Boyle, a Republican. Though the Kentucky legislature was evenly divided between Democrats and Republicans, Blackburn -- a "free silver" Democrat -- was not supported by a number of "gold" Democrats. And some Republicans crossed their party's metal line to vote for "silverite" Democrats. Boyle himself, for this and other reasons, lacked the full support of other Republicans.

Republican Poster 1896 Republican campaign poster
blaming unemployment on Democrats

Lampooning free silver as benefiting only
poor countries where labor was cheap

Color line

The color of one's "political mettle" was important in the 1896 election. The economic panic of 1893 had plunged the United States into a stubborn depression. Democrats advocated continuing the bimetallic policy introduced in 1873, according to which silver was as good as gold as a standard for monetary exchange. Republicans, blaming the depression on the freeing of silver, held that recovery would come only by returning to gold as the sole standard for determining monetary value.

In the meantime, W. Godfrey Hunter, an incumbent Republican representative from Kentucky, became the stronger Republican contender, and he might have swept the General Assembly vote -- if there had been elections. But Blackburn and his Democratic Party cronies -- including some "thugs" with bowie knives and revolvers -- prevented elections from being held, and William O'Connell Bradley (1847-1914) -- Kentucky's first Republican governor (1895–1899) -- called in state troops to preserve order in the state capitol.

When March 1897 came and no one had yet been elected to the vacated senatorial post, Governor Bradley convened a special session of the General Assembly and appointed Andrew T. Wood (d1915), also known as A.T. Wood, to fill the vacancy if the assembly didn't elect someone. But Blackburn's supporters continued to find ways to obstruct and delay elections, and by 16 March, Bradley declared martial law.

The determination of Democrats to keep the senatorial seat Democratic was partly motivated by the election in 1896 of McKinley, a Republican, to the presidency. The same election had also unseated a few Democrats in favor of Republicans in Kentucky's legislature, which increased the odds that Republicans, with the support of gold Democrats, would be able to send a Republican senator to Washington.

During the extraordinary session, W. Godfrey Hunter continued to be a strong contender. By then, President McKinley, and Mark Hanna (1837-1904), the Republican industrialist and Senator from Ohio who had managed McKinley's campaign opposing silverists, urged Bradley to elect a senator through the General Assembly rather than make an appointment. And they viewed Hunter as the most electable Republican candidate.

Though he nearly won the majority in a couple of votes, W. Godfrey Hunter was suspected by some Republicans of being a silverite, who despite his last minute support of gold, might vote for silver. In the end, Hunter withdrew, and the Republicans nominated William Joseph Deboe (1849-1927), who won the majority vote and went to Washington to serve the 1897-1903 senatorial post.

Enter H.C. Baldwin

According to the newspaper article in the pink document (above), H.C. Baldwin's switching of his vote from an unnamed candidate to W.G. Hunter was cause for considerable celebration. But the celebration was momentary, for Hunter was unable to win the majority and dropped out. Baldwin, if following the logic of his speech when voting for Hunter, probably then supported Defoe.

The memorabilia contain three items.

1. An unidentified newspaper article, probably clipped from a local Kentucky paper in the spring of 1897. The article reads as follows (my transcription, underscoring, and [bracketed] remarks).

Senator Baldwin's Efforts

Mr. Baldwin spoke in substance as follows:

Mr. President and Gentlemen of the Joint Assembly; I desire to explain my vote. For weeks and weeks we have been standing here with the eyes not only of our grand old Commonwealth, but the nation at large, turned on us. The time has come for us to act. I do not regret the action that I have taken, because I have heretofore been voting my own sentiments, because Dr. Hunter was not my choice, but recently I have heard from my people. That grand man that we elected President of the United States [William McKinley] at the late [presidential] election [in 1896] demands that we elect a Senator. His administration depends on a Senator from Kentucky, and our grand old Commonwealth demands that we should elect a Senator and get down to business and pass such laws as are needed at this session of the General Assembly.

Not only does the welfare of this country depend upon the action of this General Assembly, and the wheels of every industry in all this land of ours stand motionless in anxious expectation for speedy action at our hands. Feeling it my duty as an humble member of the party to which I belong to lay aside whatever personal preference that I might have for other men of my party, and guided alone by a patriotic impulse of love for my country and this grand old Commonwealth of Kentucky, and in obedience to the command of my constituents and those that are near and dear to me, and the desires of the Republican party throughout this nation, and for the purpose of harmony in our party, and to unfetter the hands of our National Administration, and to relieve the tax-ridden people of own Commonwealth from further cost on account of our delay, and for these reasons I want to cast my vote for the people's choice, Dr. W. G. Hunter.

Wild Excitement Followed

For five minutes after Mr. Baldwin finished the wildest excitement prevailed. Cheer after cheer went up. Men threw their hats into the air and pounded the desks and yelled like demons. The ladies clapped their hands and waved.

2. A sketch of H.C. Baldwin by an artist name Greer that apparently accompanied article.

REPRESENTATIVE H.C. BALDWIN
[ Sketch by Greer ]
The brave man who opened the way for Republican victory.

3. Campaign handbill (Front: Photograph, Back: Text)

VOTE FOR
[ Photograph ]
H. CLAY BALDWIN
FOR
County Attorney of Jackson County.

I am a candidate for County Attorney of Jackson county subject to the action of the Republican party, at the coming primary. As to my morality and qualifications, inquire about me. I have always voted for the principles of the Republican party, and for the best men, regardless of popularity. If elected I will serve the people to the best of my ability. I will oppose all unfair and unjust claims. I may not see each of you personally, but any aid that you will give me will be highly appreciated.

     Respectfully,

          H. Clay Baldwin


"My device will be my picture."

Clay Baldwin card Clay Baldwin card

H. Clay Baldwin publicity card for 10 April 1909 primary electtion
Scans of original card in Wetherall Family Collection

The message on the back of the above card -- promoting H. Clay Baldwin's bid to become the Republic Party candidate for County Attorney of Jackson County, in Kentucky -- speaks for itself.

The pencilled note -- (Teacher) / My great uncle -- is in the hand of my father, William Bascom Wetherall (1911-2013). Henry Clay Baldwin (1867-1950) was a younger brother of WBW's maternal grandfather, Newton Bascum Baldwin (1862-1919). The card was among the Baldwin-Steele family detritus that my father received over the years from his maternal great grandmother Martha Ellen (Steele) Baldwin (1863-1943), his maternal aunts Sadie Elizabeth (Baldwin) Williams (1883-1964) and Meda Jane (Baldwin) Ure (1888-1971), and his 1st cousin Faye Marguerite (Williams, Mathews, Nelson) Rebenstorf (1906-1995).

Successors

Sadie and Meda would have been the successors to whatever Baldwin-Steele photographs and documents Ellen left. While one of Meda's descendants have some materials, including the only known portrait of the entire Baldwin-Steele family, I get the impression that Sadie was the main custodian of Ellen's family detritus, and that Faye her successor.

Faye's daughter Marilyn Anne (Mathews) Disrud (1934-2013) was the successor to whatever Faye still had when she died. And Marilyn's son Todd Lee Disrud, who still resides in Coeur d'Alene, is the successor to whatever Marilyn preserved and left.

Between Sadie (Baldwin) Williams and Meda (Baldwin) Ure, Sadie was clearly the least settled -- one might even say restless and nomadic. And Sadie -- having spent more of her youth in Kentucky, and even married there before the Baldwin-Steele migration west -- appears to have been more likely to want to revisit "the old home in Kentucky" -- and surviving relatives such as "Uncle Clay".

See Sadie's old Kentucky home: Uncle Clay's southern hospitality
for an account of Sadie's 1947 Kentucky visit.

American  Biography of 19th Century Thomas William Herringshaw, ed,
Herringshaw's Encyclopedia of American Biography of the Nineteenth Century
American Publishers' Association
Chicago, Illinois, 1898 (1st ed.)
(Archive.org scan)

Henry Clay Baldwin Henry Clay Baldwin
(Herringshaw 1898, page 72)

W. Godfrey Hunter W. Godfrey Hunter
(Herringshaw 1898, page 33)

W. Godfrey Hunter W. Godfrey Hunter
1887-1888, 50th Congress
(Library of Congress scan)


The New York Times
Friday, 12 March 1897
(New York Times scan) Fight in Kentucky Fight in Kentucky Fight in Kentucky


The San Francisco Call
Wednesday, 31 March 1897
(UC Riverside CDNC scan) Kentucky Senatorial Fight

Top  

10.12 Martha Ann Baldwin and Samuel Moore

Martha Ann Baldwin Martha Ann Baldwin (21) and Samuel Moore (23) in 1893
Copped from rom B.J. Baldwin Rudder as posted on
Facebook, Baldwin Group, 9/10 July 2020
Martha Ann Baldwin Martha Ann Baldwin and Samuel Moore with family (late 1920s)
Women in back are daughters Ollie (b1908) 2nd from left and Bettie (b1910) right.
Men in back are sons Delbert (b1899) left (?) and William (b1906) right (?).
The boy between Sam and Annie is possibly Delbert's son Otis (b1920).
My straightened crop of slightly cockeyed image shared by B.J. Baldwin Rudder
Martha Ann Baldwin Samuel Moore and Martha A. Baldwin married on 11 April 1889
at the home of John R. Baldwin in Jackson County, in the witness of N.B. and James Baldwin
Image copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
Martha Ann Baldwin Martha Ann Baldwin and Samuel Moore with daughters
Probably early 1930s (Martha died in 1934)
Bettie and Ollie standing left and right behind Samuel
Bettie slightly taller, Ollie has rounder face
Martha Ann standing to left
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com
"originally shared" by Elizabeth Loman

Martha Ann and Samuel Moore in censuses

Numerous couples in Kentucky are named Samuel or Sam and Martha or Ann or Martha Moore. The following censuses for 1900, 1910, 1920, and 1930 appear to be those for nee Martha Ann Baldwin (1870-1934).

Discrepancies in census data

Census reports of Martha Ann's children are inconsistent. Either the enumerators were in a hurry, or information about the Moore household was misreported, or both.

The 1900 census enumerates 5 children but states that 6 of Martha Ann's 7 children survived.
The 1910 census adds 3 children but states that 7 of 10 survived.
The 1920 census adds another child, who appears to be the last.

These 3 censuses enumerate by name a total of 9 children. Another 2, possibly 3 children have died. And another child may have survived but not been accounted for in the 1900 census. Or possibly the unnamed child in the 1900 census was elsewhere at the time and by the 1910 census had joined the count of children who had not survived -- among a number of other scenarios that could account for the discrepancies.

Age difference

The marriage stands out a bit because Martha Ann is 2 years older than Samuel. If true that she was born on 3 July 1870 and he was born on 23 July 1872 -- and if true that they were married on 11 April 1889 -- then she was 2 years older, 18 going on 19, and he was 16 going on 17, when they married. The 1930 census reports that he was 55 and she was 59, and that he was 18 and she was 22 when they married.

1900-1940 censuses

The 1900 census for Pond Creek in Jackson County, Kentucky, shows "Samuel Moore" 25, July 1874, farming with his wife "Martha A." 29, July 1870, and 5 children -- daughters "Farzina" 10, April 1890, and "Rhoda E." 7, June 1892, sons "Leander" 6, June 1893, and George R." 2, Sept 1897, and daughter [sic = son] "Delbert" 8/12, Sept 1899. Everyone enumerated are Kentucky-born to Kentucky-born parents -- except Martha, whose father was born in Tennessee and mother was born in Virginia, which corresponds to John R. Baldwin and Margaret Howard.

The 1910 census for Mt. Zion Road in Cross Roads, Laurel County, Kentucky shows "Samuel Moore" 36 farming with his wife "Martha A." 39 and 5 children -- sons "Leander" 15 and "Dalbert" 10, daughter "Della M." 7, son "William K." 5, and daughter "Ollie M." 2. They have been married 21 years and the marriage is the 1st for both. 7 of Martha's 10 children have survived -- including, presumably, the oldest daughters on the 1900 census -- Farzina and Rhoda -- who in 1910 would have been 20 and 17 and had probably married. Leander is enumerated as a "farm laborer" on a "home farm" -- presumably helping his parents. All are born in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents -- again except Martha, whose father was born in Tennessee and mother was born in Virginia. The census includes 3 of Sam's siblings -- 1 brother and 2 sisters.

The 1920 census, also for Crossroads in Laurel County, shows "Samuel Moore" 48, "Martha A" 49, "Delbert" 20, "Della M." 17, "William H." 13, "Ollie M." 11, and new comer "Bettie M." 9. Delbert is a "laborer on farm" helping his father. Again, Martha's father and mother were born in Tennessee and Virginia. The addition of Bettie brings the count of Martha's born children to 11, of whom 8 presumably survive.

The 1930 census, again for Mount Zion Road in Crossroads, shows "Sam Moore" 55, "Martha A." 59, son "Willie" 24, daughter-in-law "Eva" 23, and daughter "Bettie" 19, plus a widowed brother "Green Moore" 68, a lodger, and 3 Moore granddaughters aged 4, 1, and 1/12. Sam was reportedly 18 and Martha 22 when they married. Willie (and his wife Eva) were 18. Bettie is also married, and she was reportedly 13 when she married. I would guess that the granddaughters are Willie's and Eva's children. This census states that Martha's parents were born in Kentucky.

The 1940 census for Brown Road, Magisterial District 3, Laurel County shows a "Sam Moore" 68 farming with his wife "Mary A." 39. He has had 6 years and she 4 years of schooling. Age-wise and county-wise, this would appear to be Martha Ann's widowed husband -- this time with a woman young enough to be a daughter.

Moore-Baldwin Children

Known children of Martha Ann and Samuel Moore

I have arbitrarily numbered the children according to their order of appearance in the census data, and allowed for children who did not survive.

 0. Martha Ann Baldwin     3 Jul 1870  14 Mar 1934
      Buried as "Martha A. Moore"
      Landrum Cemetery, London, Laurel County (Laurel), Kentucky
 0. Samuel Moore          23 Jul 1872   7 Mar 1958
      Buried as "Sam Moore"
      Landrum Cemetery, London, Laurel County, Kentucky

 1. 1st child who did not survive
 2. Unenumerated child
 3. Farzina C. Moore       9 Apr 1890  26 Oct 1972
      Buried as "Zina" with husband J.B.(James Bert) Parsley
      Landrum Cemetery, London, Laurel County, Kentucky
 4. Rhoda E. Moore           Jun 1892
 5. Leander Moore            Jun 1893
 6. George R. Moore          Sep 1897
 7. Delbert Moore            Sep 1899

1900 census states that 6 of 7 children had survived.
However, the census enumerates only 5 children.

 8. 2nd child who did not survive
 9. 3rd child who did not survive
10. Della M.               circa 1903
11. William K. Moore      20 Mar 1906  19 Jul 1976
      Buried as "Willie" with wife Eva (Wilson)
      Watkins-Casteel Cemetery, East Bernstadt, Laurel County, Kentucky
12. Ollie Mae Moore              1908         1994 
      Buried as "Ollie M."
      as "Mother" on "Chandler" headstone
      shared with Kenneth E. as "Son" on stone
      Hickory Flat Cemetery, Overpeck, Butler County, Ohio

1910 census states that 7 of 10 children had survived
However, 1 of the 3 children who had not survived may be the unenumerted child in the 1900 census.

13. Bettie Margaret Moore 24 Apr 1910  15 Oct 1996
      Buried as "Bettie M." with husband Homer L. Edwards
      Crown Hill Cemetery, Centerville, Wayne County, Indiana

Top  

10.13 George Finley Baldwin and Emeline King with children

George Finley Baldwin George Finley Baldwin (1873-1946)
with wife Emeline King (1875–1961) and 9 children circa 1913
Ancestry.com photo posted by JLKShack
George Finley Baldwin George Finley Baldwin (1873-1946)
At farm in Peoples, Kentucky
"He died plowing the bottoms of this farm"
Trim of image from B.J. Baldwin Rudder via
George Baldwin's granddaughter Emma Baldwin
George Finley Baldwin George Finley Baldwin (1873-1946)
with wife Emeline King (1875–1961) and 9 children circa 1913
Image from B.J. Baldwin Rudder
George Finley Baldwin George Finley Baldwin (1873-1946)
At farm in Peoples, Kentucky
"He died plowing the bottoms of this farm"
Trim of image from B.J. Baldwin Rudder via
George Baldwin's granddaughter Emma Baldwin

Variations in image quality

The above 4 images show 2 representations of 2 photographs. Which if any of the images is a copy of an original color scan of a printed copy of the photograph is not clear. All of the images may be the result of filtering an original WYSIWYG color scan. Not knowing the origins of the photographs or how they were scanned makes it difficult to know which representation is truer to the surviving photograph. More important than the quality of a scan, however, is the provenance of the photograph -- who, in which line, possesses it and may know more about the occasion, place, and date it was taken..

Baldwin-King (George and Emeline) children

There are 9 children in the George and Emeline Baldwin family portrait. However, the 1910 and 1930 censuses show that they had at least 10 children -- 7 boys and 3 girls -- 5 boys and 2 girls in the 1910 census, and 2 boys and 1 girl in the 1930 census. I have not yet found them in a 1920 census.

So which children are in the portrait? And when was it taken?

Considering the information in the two censuses and other data, one can estimate the differences of the children's ages -- i.e., the gaps between their births in years and months (see table below). Considering their age differences together with their birth order and sex, I would say that the portrait was taken early in 1913, a few months after the birth of Charles, and a few years before the birth of Ada. This requires viewing both of the children on George's and Emeline's laps as George (Jr.) and Charles.

If this reasoning is correct, then the identities of the children in the portrait would be as follows, left to right, birth order in (parentheses).

Back   Amos (5), Gertrude (3), Cecil (1), James (2), Armina (4)
Front   Quinton (6), George on lap (8), Howard (7), and Charles on lap (9)

The lists of children on the two censuses do not overlap. The 1910 census lists 7 born before the 1910, and the 1930 census lists 3 children born between 1910 and 1920. The largest gap is between the last two children, Charles (1912) and Ida (1916).

The following table shows the names and ages of the children in the two censuses, which list the children from oldest to youngest. The birth-order numbers are mine. I calculated the birth years from the census data, and the age differences from the most detailed birth dates available. The more detailed birth and death dates, and the name variations, are from Ancestor.com and other on-line sources. The discrepancies are par for such data sources. The accuracy of such data cannot be taken for granted.

Sources of data
    Census        Calculated  Various other sources
                  Year born   Birth date  Death date
 #  Name      Age Gap yr-mo   dy mo yr    dy mo yr   Name

1910 census
 1. Cecil J.   11 c1899 1-1     Jan 1899        1930 Cecil J. Baldwin
 2. James F.   10 c1900 1-2   9 Feb 1900        1970 James Franklin Baldwin
 3. Gertrude    9 c1901 1-4   1 Mar 1901  7 Sep 2001 Gertrude "Trudy" Schell
 4. Amos V.     7 c1903  3   14 Aug 1902 15 Jan 1980 Amos V. Baldwin
 5. Arminie     5 c1905  2          1905  7 Aug 1959 Armina
 6. Quenton     3 c1907  1          1907  1 Jan 1987 Quinton R. Baldwin
 7. Howard K.   2 c1908  3          1908 10 Jan 1973 Howard K. Baldwin
1930 census
 8. George Jr. 18 c1912 1-4  20 May 1911        1986 George C. Baldwin
 9. Charles    17 c1913 4-1  20 Sep 1912 15 Apr 2001 Charles Baldwin
10. Ada        13 c1917      14 Oct 1916        1983 Ada Mary

Top  

10.14 Samuel L.B. Baldwin and Nancy Jane Smith

Samuel Baldwin Samuel L.B. Baldwin (1875-1941) and Nancy Jane Smith with child
Occasion (baptism?), place, and date unknown
Image from B.J. Rudder Baldwin
Samuel Baldwin Samuel L.B. Baldwin (1875-1941) and Nancy Jane Smith with child
Occasion (baptism?), place, and date unknown
Ancestry.com image posted by elizabeth loman

The Above left image appears to be a cropped and refiltered version of Above right image, which has been filtered and labeled "Dartha's Aunt and Uncle".
The label implies that Dartha's father or mother is a sibling of either Samuel L.B. Baldwin or Nancy Jane Smith.

Samuel Baldwin Samuel Baldwin
Samuel Baldwin

Samuel L.B. Baldwin (1875-1941) and Nancy Jane Smith with child
Occasion (baptism?), place, and date unknown
Too little and too much information
Above left larger image from B.J. Baldwin Rudder
Right top Ancestor.com thumbnail image posted by sioux222 and others
Right bottom Ancestor.com bigtoenail posted by JLKShack

Samuel Berton Baldwin

An Ancestry.com transcription of a Social Security record for "Samuel Berton Baldwin" states that he was born in McKee [county seat of Jackson County], Kentucky, on 17 May 1875. His parents of record are "John R. Baldwin" and "Margaret B. [A.] Baldwin". He signed his name "Bert Baldwin" but a June 1937 record gives his name as "Samuel Berton Baldwin".

Samuel registered for Selective Service in 1918 as "Samuel Berton Baldwin" and signed the registration card as "S.B. Baldwin". Census names include Samuel L.B., Samuel B., Samuel, and Sam.

  1. Nancy Jane Smith is born in Kentucky in February 1875 according to 1900 census.
  2. Samuel Baldwin is born in Kentucky on 17 May 1875. He appears as "Samuel L.B." in the 1880 census for Pond Creek with his parents John R. and Margaret Baldwin and 8 of his siblings, from N.B. Baldwin (19) to Charles N. Baldwin (8/12 months)
  3. "Samuel Baldwin" and "Nancy Jane Smith" married in Jackson County, Kentucky, on 5 March 1896.
  4. The 1900 census for Mt. Idaho Precinct in Idaho County in Idaho shows "Sam Baldwin" 25, May 1875, with his wife "Nancy J." 25, Feb 1875, and a daughter "Cora M." 8/12 months, Sept 1899. Sam and Nancy J. have been married 4 years and Cora is their 1st child. Sam is employed as a farm laborer. He was born in Kentucky to a Tennessee-born father and Virginia-born mother. Nancy J. was born in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents.
  5. The 1910 census for Butler County in Ohio shows "Samuel Baldwin" 35 with is wife "Nancy J." 35 and 3 children -- "Cora M." 10, "Myrtle" 6, and "Effie L." 3. The Baldwins have been married 14 years and 3 of their 4 children survive as enumerated in this census. Samuel is employed as a "Machine hand" in a "Stove foundary". He was born in Kentucky to a Tennessee-born father and a Virginia-born mother. Nancy J. was born in Kentucky to a Tennessee-born father and Kentucky-born mother. They are renting a home on Star Avenue.
  6. On 12 September 1918, "Samuel Berton Baldwin" signed a P.M.G.O. Form No. 1 "Registation Card" in Colfax, Whitman County, Washington as "S.B. Baldwin". The card states he was 43 years old, born 17 May 1875, permanent home address Uniontown, Whitman County, Washington, "White" ("Yes"), "Native Born" ("Yes"), occupation "Laborer", employer's name "Mrs. Samuel Baldwin", and nearest relative "Mrs. Samuel Baldwin". Samuel is 5'8" tall, of stout build, has "Grey" eyes and "L. Brown" hair, and no missing limbs or eyes or other obvious defects. The form has been filled out in the smooth cursive hand of a local Selective Service Board registrar. It is signed "S.B. Baldwin" in an uneven and angular hand. During the World War I -- then called "the Great War" or "the World War" -- the selective service (military draft) system was overseen by the Provost Marshal General's Office (PMGO).
  7. The 1920 census for the Belt Precinct of Spokane City, in Spokane County, Washington, shows "Samuel B. Baldwin" 44 with is wife "Nancy" 44 and two daughters, "Myrtle" 16 and "Effie" 13. Samuel B. is a laborer at a dairy, Nancy is a cook at a lumber camp, and Myrtle is a box-checker at a box factory. Samuel B. was born in Kentucky to a Tennessee-born father and a Virginia-born mother. Nancy was born in Kentucky to a North Carolina-born father and a Kentucky-born mother. They are renting their home on S. Bernard.
  8. The 1930 census for Russellville Precinct in Multnomah County in Oregon shows "Samuel Baldwin" 54 with his wife "N. Jane" 55. Both were 21 when they married. He has no occupation and she is working as a cook at a retaurant. They are renting a home on Gladiola Avenue.
  9. The 1940 census for Portland City, Precinct 161, in Multnomah County, Oregon, shows "Samuel B. Baldwin" 64 with his wife "Nancy Jane" 65. He was working as a laborer for a WPA [Wage Price Administration] project. He had finished 4 years, and she 5 years, of schooling. They were renting a home on N.E. Davis and had been living at the same place in 1935.
  10. Samuel Baldwin died in Portland, Oregon, on 17 May 1941 leaving Nancy, according to a scan of a Portland death index.
  11. Nancy's whereabouts after Samuel died, and her death, remain to be found.

Baldwin-Smith children

Samuel L.B. Baldwin and Nancy Jane Smith appear to have had the following 4 children.

0. Samuel L.B. Baldwin   17 May 1875  17 May 1941
0. Nancy Jane Smith         Feb 1875         ????
1900 census
1. Cora Mae          30 Sep 1899   30 Nov 1970   William C. Clark
     Evergreen Cemetery
     Everett, Snohomish County, Washington
1910 census 3 of 4 survive
2. Child did not survive
3. Mertle Baldwin     3 Apr 1904  
4. Effie L. Baldwin        c1907   31 Aug 1923

Top  

10.15 Archelus Fernando Baldwin and Martha Louverna Davis

Archelus Fernando Baldwin Archelus Fernando Baldwin (1876-1935)
Ancestry.com photo posted by 1baldcamper
Archelus Fernando Baldwin Obituary states A.F. Baldwin born 1877
Rotated and cropped version of
Ancestry.com image posted by PWADLE21
Archelus Fernando Baldwin Archelus Fernando Baldwin (1876-1935)
Ancestry.com photo posted by JLKShack
  1. Archelus "Arch" Fernando Baldwin was born on 20 June 1876 in Jackson County, Kentucky.
    1. "1876" according to tombstone, "1877" according to obituary (see right).
  2. Martha Louverna "Lou" Davis was born on 14 feb 1888 in Jackson County, Kentucky.
  3. Arch and Martha share a common "Baldwin" tombstone in Wilson Cemetery in Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky.
  4. The 1880 census shows "Archelus F. Baldwin" 3 living in Jackson County, Kentucky, apparently in Pond Creek, with his father "John R. Baldwin" 51, mother "Margaret" 44, and 8 siblings -- "Newton B." 19, "James A." 16, "Elihur J." 13, "Henry C." 12, "Martha A." 9, "George F." 7, "Samuel L. B." 5, and "Charles N." 8/12. His father, and all older brothers down to and including Henry, are laborers, presumably on the family farm. Margaret is keeping house.
  5. The 1900 census for Magisterial District 3, Pond Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky, shows "Arch" 22, June 1877, as the son of "John R. Baldwin" 71, Sept 1828, and his wife "Margret" [sic] 64, Dec 1835. John R. is farming, Arch is teaching. John R. has been married "43(?)" [digit following "4" is x-ed out and difficult to read], and Margaret has been married "4" [sic] years. Margaret has had 14 children of whom 11 are alive.
    1. John R. was born in Virginia to Virginia-born parents. Margaret was born in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents.
  6. The 1910 census for Magisterial District 3, Pond Creek Precinct No. 2, Jackson County, Kentucky, shows "Arch F." 32 with his wife "Martha" 20 and their daughter "Lithe M." [sic = Litha M.] 1/12. Arch F. and Martha have been married 3 years in the 1st marriage for both. Martha has had 2 children of which 1 is still alive. Arch F. is farming on his own account on a general farm he owns free of mortgage.
    1. Arch was born in Kentucky to a Kentucky-born father and a Kentucky-born mother.
    2. Arch and Martha are living on "Davis Road". Above their household on the same enumeration sheet for Davis Road several Davis households, including the large household of Martha's parents, "James W. Davis" 52 [James Wesley Davis (1858-1931)] and his wife "Lizzie" 50 [Telitha Jane Cook (1860–1932)], with 6 children ages 20 to 8. the small neighboring Davis households are probably those of older sons. The Davises have been married 35 years, and Lizzie has had 14 children of whom 10 are living.
  7. A P.M.G.O. Form No. 1 (Red) [selective service, military conscription] "Registration Card" -- for the local board of Jackson County in McKee -- signed "Arch Fernando Baldwin" on 12 September 1918 -- shows "Arch Fernando Baldwin", 20 June 1877, permanently residing on "Moores Creek" in Jackson County, Kentucky. He is self-employed as a farmer in Moores Creek, and his nearest relative is "Martha Baldwin" of Moores Creek.
  8. The 1920 census for Pond Creek, Precinct 2, Part of [Magisterial] District 3, Jackson County, Kentucky, shows "Arch F. Baldwin" 42 with is wife "Martha" 30 and 5 children -- "Litha M." 9, "Bertha" 8, "Datha" 7, "Alfred" 4-6/12, and "Albert" 2-3/12. Arch F. is "farming" on a home farm on his own account. Martha is a "farm laborer" on a home farm for wages.
    1. Arch was born in Kentucky to a Tennessee-born father and a Virginia-born mother.
  9. The 1930 census for Pond Creek District 3, Jackson County, shows "Arch F. Baldwin" 52 with his wife "Martha" 41 and 5 children -- "Bertha" 18, "Datha" 17, "Alfred J." 14, "Albert C." 12, and "Willie C." 10. Arch is a farmer on a general farm. He was 29, and Martha was 18, when they married, which implies that they were married in 1907.
    1. Arch was born in Kentucky to Virginia-born parents.
  10. Arch Baldwin died on 21 February 1935 in Jackson County, Kentucky.
    1. An obituary for "A.F. Badwin" states that he "left nine brothers, Joe, Bob, and Charlie, of Laurel county; James, George and Clay of Jackson county, Sam, of Oregon, Jack, of Wyoming, and Willie, of Idaho. / One brother, Baskum [sic = Bascum] Baldwin, and three sisters, Mrs. Ann Moore, Mrs. Mollie Lewis and Mrs. Lizzie Taylor passed on before."
  11. The 1940 census for Magisterial District 3 [Pond Creek?] in Jackson County, Kentucky, shows "Martha" 51, widowed, as the mother of the head of household "Alfred Baldwin" 24 and his wife "Nellie" 23, and their 4 children -- "Leander" 6, "Arch F." 4, "Frieda R." 2, and "Homer" 6/12. Alfred is a farmer on a farm on his own account. The family was living at the same location in 1935 -- which suggests that Alfred is working his father's farm. The neighboring "Vaughan" [sic = Vaughn] household on the same enumeration sheet is seen on the above earlier censuses for Alfred's Baldwin-Davis family. Alfred, Nellie, and Martha finished respectively 6, 4, and 5 years of schooling.
  12. Martha Baldwin died on 26 November 1951 in Jackson County, Kentucky.
  13. Arch and Martha share a common "Baldwin" tombstone in Wilson Cemetery in Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky.

Baldwin-Davis children

An obituary for "A.F. Baldwin" (see above right) states that he and Martha had 7 children of whom 6 were alive.

0. Archilus Fernando Baldwin  20 Jun 1877  21 Feb 1935
     Born in Kentucky
     Died in Jackson County, Kentucky
0. Martha Louverna Davis      14 Feb 1888  26 Nov 1951
     Born Jackson County, Kentucky
     Died Jackson County, Kentucky

1. Child who did not survive
2. Telitha Margaret   3 Apr 1910  26 Jun 1989  "Litha"  King
     Born Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
     Married Daniel Robert King (1906–1990)
     Died Connersville, Fayette County, Indiana
3. Bertha E.         6 Jul 1911  17 Oct 1968
     Born Jackson County, Kentucky
     Married Earl J. Vaughn (1909–1985)
     Died Connersville, Fayette County, Indiana
4. Datha             Circa 1913
     Born Jackson County, Kentucky
     7 in 1920 census, 17 in 1930 census
     1940 census shows "Datha King" 26, wife of "Eliza King" 28
       Pond Lick Branch, Magisterial District 3, Jackson County, Kentucky
       Martha Baldwin, 53, widowed, residing with them
       Eliza, Datha, and Martha finished 8, 6, and 4 years of schooling
       Dartha's brother "Albert Baldwin" 22 and wife "Bess" in neighboring household
       Alfred and Bess finished 6 years of schooling
       Census enumerated 15 April 1940
5. James Alfred     24 Jun 1915  26 Jan 1997  "Alfred"
     Born McKee, Jackson County, Kentucky, USA
     Married Maggie Hunter (1920–2008)
     Died Connersville, Fayette County, Indiana
6. Albert Clay      11 Sep 1917   4 Aug 1994
     Born Bond, Jackson County, Kentucky
     Married "Bess" (15 in 1940 census, born circa 1925)
     Died East Bernstadt, Laurel County, Kentucky
7. William Chester  28 Mar 1920  27 Dec 2006  "Willie"
     Born Moores Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
     Married Opal Lee Browning (1921–2007)
     Died Connersville, Fayette County, Indiana

Top  

10.15 Charles Nelson Baldwin and his families

Cinthia Emma McDowell, Nancy Grace Fullington

Charles Baldwin Emma McDowell Stella Carmack Charles Nelson Baldwin (1879-1944)
Cinthia Emma McDowell (1879-1916)
Stella Jane Baldwin Carmack (1899-1973)

Circa Fall 1899 (Stella born 7 August 1899)
Image from BJ Baldwin Rudder
Charles Nelson Baldwin Charles Nelson Baldwin (1879-1944)
Occasion, place, date unknown
Image from BJ Baldwin Rudder
attributed to C.N. Baldwin's daughter
Sandy/Flo Baldwin Herron
Charles Nelson Baldwin C.N. Baldwin's death certificate
Informed by his wife Grace Baldwin
Copped and cropped from Ancestry.com

Some great grandchildren of Charles Nelson Baldwin (1878-1944) have reported that their grandparents -- his children with his 1st and 2nd confirmable wives, Cinthia Emma McDowell (1879-1916) and Grace [Nancy G., Grace L.] Fullington (1900-1980) -- didn't know much about their half-siblings owing to their differences in age.

Some of the children born to Emma between 1899-1916, and some of those born to Grace between 1922 and the late 1930s or early 1940s, had either little or no contact with each other. Moreover, Emma's youngest children were too young when she died to remember her, and Grace's youngest were too young when Charles died to remember him.

Charles Baldwin and his families in censuses

Census and other data reveal the following information about Charles Nelson Baldwin (1878-1940).

  1. Charles Baldwin married Emma McDowell on 16 August 1898. Their first child, Stella, was born on 7 August 1899. The portrait to the right appears to have been taken that fall.
  2. The 1900 census for Horse Lick, 4th Magisterial District, Jackson County, Kentucky shows "Charley Baldwin" 21, a farmer, born Sept 1878, with his wife "Cinthia" 19, born Aug 1880, and a daughter, Stella 8/12, born Sept 1889. They had been married for 1 years and Cinthia's only child had survived. They were renting their farm and house.
    1. All members of the household were said to be born in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents.
  3. The 1910 census Terrell Creek Road in the 3rd Magisterial District of Jackson County shows "Charley Baldwin" 30 with his wife "Emma" 29 and children -- "Stella" 8 [sic = 10], "Robert" 7, "Maggie" 6, "Cay" 2, and an unnamed child 1/12 [later "Earnest"]. Charles and Emma had been married 11 years, and she had had 5 children of which all 5 survived as enumerated here, Charles was farming on his own account on a general farm he owned free of mortgage.
    1. Charles was born in Kentucky to a Tennessee-born father and a Virginia-born mother. All others in the household were born in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents.
  4. Cinthia Emma McDowell, born on 28 August 1879, died on 3 March 1916, apparently after gall bladder surgery..
  5. A P.M.G.O. Form No. 1 (Red) "Registration Card" signed on 12 September 1918 at the local [selective serivce] board in McKee, Jackson County, for "Charles Nelson Baldwin", is signed "C. N. Baldwin". He attested that he was born in Bond, Jackson, Kentucky, on 2 September 1878, and was a self-employed farmer in Bond. His nearest relative was "Stella Baldwin, daughter" of Bond. He was of medium height and build, and had brown hair and eyes and no obviously disqualifying disabilities.
  6. The 1920 census for Pond Creek Precinct 3, District 3, Jackson County -- as of 1 January 1920, enumerated on 1 March 1920 -- shows "Charlie Baldwin" 49 [sic = 41], widowed, with 7 children -- "Stella" 19, "Robert" 18, "Maggie" 15, "Coy" 14, and "Earnest" 10, "Eldon" 8, and "Maud" 5-0/12. Charlie is farming on a general farm on his own account. All 4 older children, from Stella (19) to Coy (14), are farm laborers on a home farm, presumably their father's.
    1. All members of the household were said to be born in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents.
  7. A "Marriage Bond" issued in Bond in Jackson County, Kentucky, by "The Commonwealth of Kentucky", includes a "Register of Marriage" which states that "C.N. Baldwin" 40, widowed, and "Grace Fullington" 21, single, were issued a marriage license and married on 23 March 1920. He was born in Jackson County and she was born in neighboring Owsley County, and both are residing in Bond. His parents are John R. Baldwin and Margaret Baldwin and her father is Frank Fullington. One of the witnesses is Charles's daughter Maggie Baldwin.
  8. The 1930 census for Magisterial Disctrict 3, South Brodhead Precinct, in Rockcastle County, Kentucky -- as of 1 April 1930, enumerated on 15 April 1930 -- shows "Charles Baldwin" 51 with his wife "Grace" 30 and 7 children -- Emma's children "Ernest" 19, "Elden" 17, and "Maud" 14 -- and Grace's children "Marie" 8, "Mabel" 6, "Albert" 3, and "Lilly R." 1-6/12. Charles is farming on his own account on a general farm. Earnest is a farm laborer on a general farm, presumably helping his father. This census states that Charles was 19 when he first married and Grace was 18 when she first married.
    1. All members of the household were said to be born in Kentucky to Kentucky-born parents.
  9. "William F. Baldwin" born on 19 December 1930 in Rockcastle County [Laurel County], Kentucky, to Grace Fullington [mother's maiden name]. Married Lucille Dees on 19 December 1953 in Indiana while residing in Richmond, Wayne County, Indiana. He is "Bill F. Baldwin" on a Social Security record. He "William Franklin Big Red Baldwin" on obituary records which state that he died on 16 October 2012 and was buried on 20 October 2012. Lucille, born in Rockcastle County, Kentucky [Livingson, Kentucky] on 4 June 1932, reportedly died on 11 June 2012 and was buried on 16 June 2012. They were residing in Paris, Ohio, at the time of their deaths, apparently just days apart. Find a Grave shows them buried as "William F." and "Lucille" under a shared "Baldwin" tombstone in Goshen Cemetery in Richmond, Wayne County, Indiana. Images of the tombstone, posted in 2017, show their birth years but no death years.
  10. I cannot find a matching Charlie and Grace Baldwin in the 1940 census, in which the youngest 3 of the 4 younger children in the 1930 census, and William, born in 1930, should still have been living with them.
  11. "Charles N. Baldwin" died in Symbol, Laurel County, Kentucky, on 31 July 1944 from a cardiac disease. He was born in Terrels Creek and was a farmer, according to the informant, an H.N. Reese of Symbol, Kentucky, who did not know the names of Charles's parents. Charles was married, his wife's name was "Grace Baldwin", and she was 44 at the time of his death.
    1. Pilgrims Rest Cemetery in East Bernstadt, Laurel County, Kentucky, has two similarly designed flat headstones for the following Baldwins.
      1. CHARLEY N. BALDWIN / SEPT. 2, 1879 / AUG. 1, 1944
        GRACE L. BALDWIN / MAY 8, 1900 / MAR. 1, 1980 / THE LORD IS MY SHEPARD

Charles and Grace had a 4th child in 1930. An obituary for William Franklin "Big d" Baldwin of Paris, Ohio, who died on 16 October 2012, states that he was born on 19 December 1930 in Laurel, Kentucky to "C. N. 'Charlie' and Grace Fullerton Baldwin". However, some other records give his mother's maiden name as "Grace Fullington".

Baldwin-McDowell children

Baldwin-Fullington children

 0. Charles Nelson Baldwin   2 Sep 1879   31 Jul 1944
 0. Cinthia Emma McDowell   28 Aug 1879    3 Mar 1916
 0. Grace Fullington         8 May 1900    1 Mar 1980
Children with Cinthia Emma McDowell (1879-1916)
 1. Stella Jane   7 Aug 1899  30 Nov 1973
      Stella married Charlie Carmack on 17 Feb 1920
        in Bond, Jackson County, Kentucky.
      She died on 30 November 1973 and is buried
        in Providence Cemetery in Quail
        in Rockcastle County, Kentucky.
      Charlie Carmack, born 22 March 1900, date of death unknown,
        and some of their children, are also buried in Providence Cemetery.
 2. Robert Lee          1902–2000
 3. Maggie              1905–
 4. Coy                 1907–1981
 5. Earnest      12 Feb 1912   6 Jan 1946
      Commonweath of Kentucky Certificate of Death
        Earnest Baldwin  
        Male, White, Single
        Born 12 Feb 1912, Jackson County
        Died 6 Jan 1946, Brodhead, Rockcastle County
        Father "Charlie Baldwin" born Jackson County
        Mother "Emma McDowell" born Jackson County
        Informant Charlie Carmack [husband of sister Stella Jane]
        "Killed by gunshot wounds"
 6. Eldon               1912–1993
 7. Maud Baldwin        1915–
"C.N. Baldwin" and "Grace Fillington" marry on 23 March 1920
Children with Grace Fullington (1900–1980)
 8. Marie             bc1922
 9. Tilda Mabel         1924–1994
10. Albert            bc1927
11. Lilly R.          bc1928 
12. William Franklin  19 Dec 1930   16 Oct 2012  

Top  

Two N.B. Baldwin deeds

Two deeds related to property acquired by N.B. Baldwin -- laying "on Tearls creek on the Stablefield branch in the Ballard Smith Survey" (Deed 1), and "on the waters of Tearls creek" (Deed 2), in Jackson County -- came to light in the fall of 2019. Images and transcriptions of the deeds, analyses of their particulars, and remarks on related topics are presented below under the following (linked) headings.

Provenances  Curators of surviving copies
Time lines  Chronology of actions from 1904 to 1913
Deed 1  Images with transcription
Deed 2  Images with transcription
Quality  Neither deed is good but one is better
Commonalities  The particulars side by side
Proximity  Are the tracts contiguous?

40 acres and a mule  The significance of a "quarter-quarter" section
History of surveying  How land was measured then and now

Family ties  What N.B. Baldwin's deeds say about a community
Successors  G.W. Moore, Chester Hacker, and Roy Baldwin
  Hacker's Steele wife an in-law relative of N.B. and Roy
Collateral lines  Steele-Grubb and Baldwin-Howard families
  6 generations of blood and in-law siblings and cousins

Shared futures  Chester Baldwin and Florence McKinney
  Grandkids of Baldwin-Garland fence neighbors marry

Top  

Provenances

Curators of surviving copies

On 14 October 2019, Lois McWhorter posted 2 images of what I am calling Deed 2 on the Baldwin Genealogy group page on Facebook. I posted a remark, and Lois and B.J. Baldwin Rudder, another Baldwin cousin, added comments. And on 19 October, B.J. sent me 4 images of what I am calling Deed 1 through Messenger, on which we exchanged more remarks.

Lois and B.J. and I are cousins in different branches descending from John Baldwin and Margaret Howard in what I call the "Baldwin-Howard" line. The line begins with John's marriage to Margaret's older sister Rebecca, which whom he fathered 3 children. When Rebecca died, John married Margaret, with whom he fathered 12 more children. I am a great grandson of N.B. Baldwin in what I call the "Baldwin-Steele" line. N.B. Baldwin was John's 4th son -- his and Margaret's 3rd son. B.J. is a daughter of Walter R. Baldwin (1910–1990), the youngest son of N.B. Baldwin's 1st younger brother James A. Baldwin (1864-1954). Lois is a granddaughter of Walter's older brother Roy E. Baldwin (1906-1980), the 2nd youngest son of James A. Baldwin and Nancy Ann McGee (1873-1946), which define what am calling the "Baldwin-McGee" line.

Cousins

My father's mother, Ida Mae (Baldwin) Wetherall, was Walter's and Roy's 1st cousin, hence my father and B.J. were 2nd cousins, and B.J. and I are 2nd cousins once removed. Lois and B.J. are 1st cousins once removed, and Lois and I are straight up 3rd cousins.

The property described in Deed 1, the earlier of the two deeds, is presently (Fall 2019) in the possession of a descendant of James and Nancy Baldwin's 5th known son Walter R. Baldwin and Edith (Price) Baldwin. Deed 2 is in the possession of a descendant of their 4th known son Roy E. Baldwin and Oma Mae (Oma Mae Shepherd) Baldwin.

In same extended collateral line

That two different deeds related to property conveyed by two different parties to N.B. Baldwin should turn up in the possession of different descendants of N.B. Baldwin's younger brother James A. Baldwin is at least partly related to manner in which N.B. Baldwin's former home and farm changed hands. But it also suggests a close relationship between N.B. Baldwin as a brother who left Kentucky and James A. Baldwin as a brother who stayed.

Deed 1 also represents an instance in which a husband (John R. Baldwin) made a deed to pass property to his wife (Margaret Baldwin), who immediately after his death deeded the same property to their son (N.B. Baldwin).

Top  

Time lines

Chronology of actions from 1904 to 1913

Both Deed 1 and Deed 2 are related to conveyances of tracts of land in Jackson County, Kentucky, to N.B. (Newton Bascum) Baldwin (1862-1919), the 3rd of 10 sons and the 4th of 12 children John R. Baldwin (1828-1909) fathered with his 2nd wife Margaret Howard (1835-1912). John fathered 1 son and 2 daughters with his 1st wife, Margaret's older sister Rebecca Howard (1828-1855). He married Margaret barely 11 weeks after Rebecca's death.

What I am calling "Deed 1" consists of two parts, which I am calling "Deed 1a" and "Deed 1b". In Deed 1a, John R. Baldwin conveys a tract of land to his wife Margaret Baldwin. In Deed 1b, Margaret conveys the same tract to their son N.B. Baldwin.

In Deed 2, Henderson Reynolds and his wife and son convey a different but possibly contiguous tract of land to N.B. Baldwin, for which N.B. Baldwin's 3rd younger brother H.C. [Henry Clay] Baldwin paid some of the fees.

The combined time lines of the two deeds span the deaths of N.B. Baldwin's parents, John R. and Margaret Baldwin, the 1st parties in Deed 1, and Henderson Reynolds, the principal 1st party in Deed 2.

The information highlighted in "rose" comes from a printout listing several Jackson County deeds showing N.B. Baldwin as either a "grantor" or "grantee". See Successors (below) for an image of the printout. Similarities and discrepanacies between Deeds 1 and 2 and the listed Jackson County deeds are noted in the comments.

Date Deeds Parties
1900 N.B. Baldwin in 1900 census for Pond Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky
1904-05-09 Deed 1a made 42 acres from John R. Baldwin to Margaret Baldwin
1905-01-12 Deed 2 made 40 acres from Henderson Reynolds & Son to N.B. Baldwin
1905-03-01 N.B. Baldwin in Kansas census
1906-05-16 Deed 2 filed N.B. Baldwin's brother H.C. Baldwin pays fee

H.C. Baldwin

A notation at the bottom of the cover of this deed states that the tax was paid by H.C. (Henry Clay) Baldwin (1867-1950), who was N.B. Baldwin's 3rd younger brother. Presumably "Clay" as he was known was acting for his older brother because "Bascum" was not in Kentucky.

In addition to being a farmer, "H. Clay Baldwin" was also a lawyer and politician. He served as a representative of the 71st District of Kentucky in the state legislature in 1896-1897, ran for the office of County Attorney for Jackson County in 1909, and served as representative of the 80th District in 1932-1933.

"Clay" was the pride of N.B. Baldwin's family in Idaho. It was Uncle Clay who N.B. Baldwin's oldest daughter, Sadie Williams (1883-1964) would visit during her only known trip back to her "Old Kentucky Home" in the fall of 1947, when she waxed nostalic about "the southern hospitality of my childhood" in postcards she mailed my father William B. Wetherall, her nephew, then living in San Francisco, from Annville.

1906-05-19 DEED-13-441 N.B. Baldwin as grantee of PD:8 ACRES from BALDWIN JOHN / BALDWIN MARGARET according to Jackson County records.

The particulars of this 8-acre parcel are not clear.

1906-06-18 DEED-12-562 N.B. Baldwin as grantee of PD:40 AC. / TERRILLS CR. from REYNOLDS HENDERSON / REYNOLDS ANNIE / REYNOLDS WM. according to Jackson County records.

The 40-acre "Terrills" [Terrells] Creek deed appears to be the same as Deed 2.

1907 Newton B. Baldwin in Lincoln, Nebraska directory
1908 Newton B. Baldwin in Spokane, Washington directory
1909 Newton B. Baldwin in Spokane, Washington directory
1909-03-10 John R. Baldwin dies
1909-09-09 Deed 1b made From Margaret Baldwin to N.B. Baldwin
1909-12-19 Henderson Reynolds dies
1910 Newton B. Baldwin in 1910 census for St. Maries, Kootenai County, Idaho
1911-1912 Newton B. Baldwin in St. Maries, Idaho directory
1912-06-03 Margaret Howard Baldwin dies
1912-12-19 DEED-20-20 N.B. Baldwin as grantor of PD:8 AC. / SEXTONS CR. to LONGWORTH WM.

William Longworth (1873-?) lived in the Pond Creek area of Jackson County most of his life, according to federal censuses. The 1910 census for Magisterial District 3 shows "William Longworth" 35 farming with his wife "Ninnie" 29 on "Terrell Creek Road" two households above "H. Clay Baldwin" 42 and "Malinda" 29, who is enumerated above "Charley Baldwin" 30 and his wife "Emma" 29. All three couples had been married 11 years. 4 of Ninnie's 6 children, 4 of Malinda's 5 children, and all 5 of Emma's children, had survived. Listed after Charles Baldwin is "Bradley Baldwin" (21) with his wife "Maude" (19). They have been married only 1 year and have no children. However, living with them is Bradley's grandmother "Margaret" 78, widowed, mother of 12 children of whom 11 had survived. Bradley Baldwin (1888-1963) is a bit of a mystery. See census particulars under Baldwin-Howard for details.

Sextons Creek, in Clay County, is today about 13 miles to the east of Annville in Jackson County. It appears to have had a population of around 110 people in 1895 and a post office. The community is about the same distance east and a bit north of the Baldwin Branch area, which is roughly 7 miles south and a bit east of Annville in Jackson County. The mouth of Sexton Creek, as the stream itself is called, is in Clay County, but its watershed includes parts of Jackson and Owsley counties.

1913-02-15 Deed 1b filed
1913-02-15 DEED-20-94 N.B. Baldwin as grantee of PD:42 AC. / JACKSON CO. from BALDWIN MARGARET

The 42-acre Jackson County deed appears to be the same as Deed 1.

1913-03-01 DEED-20-114 N.B. Baldwin as grantor of PD:2 TRACTS / TERRILLS CR. to MOORE G.W.

The 2 tracts on "Terrills" [Terrells] Creek appear to be the 42-acre and 40-acre tracts of Deeds 1 and 2.

See G.W. Moore (below) for his identity.

1913-03-01 DEED-20-118 N.B. Baldwin as grantor of PD:5 AC. / TERRILLS CR. to BALDWIN H.C.

The 5-acre parcel may have originated from the 2 large tracts, which exeeded 80 acres by at least 2 acres "more or less".

H.C. Baldwin (1867-1950) was N.B. Baldwin's 3rd younger brother Henry Clay Baldwin, better known as H. Clay Baldwin. He had paid a $1.25 fee or tax related to the filing of Deed 2 -- apparently as N.B. Baldwin's legal representative, as N.B. had already left Kentucky. H.C. Baldwin may have managed or had other interests in the property. The 1910 census shows "H. Clay Baldwin" and his family living off "Terrell Creek Road" (see above).

1914-1917 Newton B. Baldwin in St. Maries, Idaho directories
1919-03-22 N.B. Baldwin dies
2019-10/11 Deeds 1 and 2 Original deeds found by Baldwin-Howard descendants.

Images of deeds and deed records shared by descendants of respectively Walter and Roy Baldwin, who were sons of James A. Baldwin, a younger brother of N.B. Baldwin, who were sons of John R. and Margaret (Howard) Baldwin.

See Collateral lines for a family tree showing relationships.

Top  

Deed 1a 1904

Deed 1

Above Side 1 of cover sheet showing the names of the grantor Margaret Baldwin and the grantee N.B. Baldwin, the number of the book and the page in the book where the deed was recorded, and the tax

Right Side 2 of cover with boilerplate for notarization on 9 September 1909 and recording on 15 February 1913 of the deed enclosed in the cover

Below Sides 1 and 2 of the deed enclosed in the cover, signed by the grantor Margaret Baldwin on 9 September 1909, citing a deed dated 9 May 1904 in which John R. Baldwin conveyed the same tract of land to her

Scans compliments of B.J. Rudder,
a Baldwin-Howard line cousin

Deed 1 1913
Deed 1b 1909 Deed 1b 1909

Deed 1

1909 deed from Margaret Baldwin,
transferring to N.B. Baldwin a tract of land
deeded her by John R. Baldwin in 1904,
notarized in 1909 and recorded in 1913

Deed 1 consists of two sheets of paper -- (1) a cover form on the back of which is boilerplate for notarization and recording, and (2) a form for stating the names of the grantor and the grantee and describing the property being deeded, and for the signature of the granting party.


Cover

DEED
FROM
Margaret Baldwin [typed]
TO
N. B. Baldwin [typed]
ACKNOWLEDGED BY
[ no information ]
Recorded in Deed Book No 20
Page 94
Tax & fee $1.25


9 September 1909 deed
following 9 April 1904 deed
recorded 15 February 1913

WARRANTLY DEED Printed and for sale by the MOUNTAIN ECHO PRINTING CO., London, Ky.

This Deed, between Margaret Baldwin
of Jackson Co, Ky.
of the first part, and N. B. Baldwin
of the second part,
Witnesseth, that the said party of the first part, in consideration of Love and Affection and his interest in the lands of the John R. Baldwin farm the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, do hereby sell, grant and convey to the party of the second part, his heirs and assigns, the following described property, viz.: a certain tract of land lying and being in Jackson County, Kentucky, and being party of the same tract of land conveyed to the party of the first part by John R. Baldwin by deed bearing date 9 day of May 1904, which is duly recorded in Deed Book No 11 at page 521 Jackson County Court Clerk's Office.

[ Handwritten description ]

Said land lying on Tearls creek on the Stablefield branch in the Ballard Smith Survey, And bounded and described as follows, To wit: begining [sic = beginning] at a stone at the county road near the Jessie Taylor old house [site], Thence, [at a] South eastwardly to the top of ridge to a small sour wood, Thence nearly same direction across the hollow to a sour wood on the end of point -- Thence an eastwardly course a straight line to four chestnut trees in the line between the Baldwin and Garland land, Thence with same line northward course to the Corneleis, Moore, Garland, and Baldwin land, Thence westwardly withe [sic = with] the Morhed line to a persimon near the road in the Nancy Combs line, Thence Southwestwardly with the road to the big [misning], westwardly to a stone at the road, Thence Southwestwardly with the county road to the beginning. Containing 42 acres more or less.

To have and to hold the same, with all the appurtenances thereon, to the second part his heirs and assigns forever, with covenant of "General Warranty." A lien is retained upon the property hereby conveyed, as security for the payment of the said unpaid purchase money.

In Testimony Whereof, witness our signature this 9th day of Sept. 1909.

[Signed] Margaret Baldwin


Notarization 9 September 1909
Recording 15 February 1913

State of Kentucky
                     Sct. [State court]
County of Jackson

I. E. Pennington, a Notary Public for the county aforesaid, do certify that on this day the aforegoing deed was produced to me in the county aforesaid and acknowledged and delivered by Margaret Baldwin to be her act and deed

Witness my hand this 9th. day of September 1909.

[Signed] E. Pennington
N.P.J.C. [Notary Public Jackson County]

State of Kentucky
                     Sct.
County of Jackson

I, D.G. Callier Clerk for the County Court for the county aforesaid, do certify that on this day this Deed from Margaret Baldwin
to
N.B. Baldwin
was received and lodged in my office for record, and that I have truly recorded it, together with this and the aforegoing certificate thereof endorsed, in my said office.

Witness my hand this 15th day of Feb. 1913
D.G. Callier Clerk Jackson C. C. [County Court]
by H.M. Callier D. C. [Deputy Clerk] Jackson C. C.

Top  

Deed 2 1906 Deed 2 1906
1905 deed from Henderson Reynolds & Son to N.B. Baldwin recorded in 1906
Images compliments of Lois McWhorter, a Baldwin-Howard line cousin

Deed 2

1905 deed from Henderson Reynolds & Son
conveying to N.B. Baldwin a tract of land,
lodged and recorded in 1906

The received images of Deed 2 show only parts of what appear to be 2 sheets of paper -- (1) a cover with filing particulars, and (2) a form for naming the grantor and the grantee and describing the property to be deeded. The received image clips the margins, and the grantor's signature and date signed. Presumably an image of the other side of the cover would show notarization and recording particulars.


Cover

DEED.
FROM
Henderson Reynolds & Son
TO
N.B. Baldwin
ACKNOWLEDGED BY
The Grantors in Deed
form of Law this the
12 Day of January 1905
H.C. Coombs [O.C.C.] [Officer of the County Court]
by S.G. Moore [D.C.O.C.C.] [Deputy Clerk, Officer of the County Court]
Filed May 16 1906
[Fee] [$.50] paid
J.H. Reynolds [?]
Lodged for record & tax paid
May, 16th 1906
D.G. Colliers
Recorded in Deed Book No. 12
Page 562
[?] Fee paid - $1.25
by H.C. Baldwin


12 January 1905 deed
recorded 16 May 1906

Printed and for sale by The Mountain Echo in London, Ky

This Deed, made this the 12th day of Jan 1905
between Henderson Reynolds and his wife Annie Reynolds and Wm. B. Reynolds of the County of Owsley [Ky.] of the first part, and N. B. Baldwin of the County of Jackson and State of Ky of the second part
WITNESSETH, that the said party of the first part, in consideration of $125.00
one Hundred and twenty five Dollars 0 cts in hand, paid
the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, do hereby sell, grant and convey to the party of the second part, his heirs and assigns the following described property, viz: A certain tract on parcel of land lying in Jackson County, Kentucky, on the waters of Tearls Creek and bounded as follows, to-wit: Beginning on a popular thence westwardly with [J.] R. Baldwin line to Andy Combs's [sic "Combs" if consistent with next] line to a [marker] sit [sic = set] in the ground Near the Branch thence [on a] strait-line [sic = straight line] to a chestnut comeing [sic = coming] to said Combs [sic "Combs's" if consistent with prior] line [at] the corner of the fence thence with the fence [to] the top of the ridge thence with the meanders [of] the ridge to the B.F. Garlands [sic = Garland / Garland's] line thence with [said] line to the Beginning containing [40] Acres [more] or less

Top  

1845 Survey 1845 survey plat with precise point and line description
The plat is true to scale but is not oriented with North
Copped and cropped from Virtual Museum of Surveying
which see for many similar examples

Quality of N.B. Baldwin deeds

Neither deed is good but one is better

The best way to appraise the technical quality of the N.B. Baldwin deeds is to compare them with older deeds, like the 1845 deed shown to the right for a 29-3/4-acre tract of land on Lick Creek. The deed is posted with a number of other old deeds, including several from the early 1700s, in the Old Handwritten Documents section of the Paper & Ink room of the virtual Survey Museum at Virtua History of Surveying (www.www.surveyhistory.org) website.

The locality of "Lick Creek" is the 1845 deed is not specified in the description of the tract, which begins from "an Elm and Box Elder on the east bank of said creek, corner with Jas. N. Stephens." From the point commences a line "with his line S72½°E 37¾ poles to a Stone in the said line, corner with Henry Wilson."

Each line begins from a point or "corner", and the description of each line begins with "Thence" and ends with the point or corner, and a period. As a traverse of a loop, the description ends where it beings.

Every line defined with a bearing to the nearest quarter of a degree, and a distance to the nearest quarter of a pole -- a "pole" or a "rod" being 5-1/2 yards, 16-1/2 feet -- which is 1/4th of a "chain" or 1/320 mile -- a mile being 5,280 feet, 1,760 yards, or 80 chains.

A measurement to the nearest 1/4th pole would be within 4-1/8th feet -- so plus-or-minus 2-1/16th feet. The greater the number of such measurements in a perimeter, the greater the odds the pluses and minuses will balance out. But the 1845 survey has only 8 lines -- some long, some short -- with greater odds that plus and minus errors could compound.

A seasoned farmer or woodsman could estimate 8-point cardinal directions -- N, NE, E, SE, S, SW, W, NW -- without a compass. That's 45 degrees between each direction. 16-point (22 degree 30 minute) cardinal directions -- N, NNE, NE, ENE, E et cetera -- are considerably more difficult to eyeball, hence the popularity of 16-point compasses among mariners. 32 point (11 degree 15 minute) compasses have also been used but a relatively rare.

But around from early times, land surveyors used 360-degree compasses that allowed visual interpolation to a quarter of a degree. Later compasses, especially those that came to be used on transits, had secondary vernier scales that allowed instrument (rather than eyeball) interpretations using main scales and vernier scales of increasing accuracy. With 1/10th degree vernier, one could read to interpolate to the nearest 1/10th degree or 6 minutes. With a 1-degree scale and a double 1/6th-degree vernier, one could could interpolate to the nearest 5 minutes. With a 30-minute scale and a 30-mminute vernier, one could interpolate to the nearest 1 minute.

The earliest transit, introduced in the early 1830s, a telescope with crosshairs, with a compass that was graduated with a vernier to read to 3 minutes. However, the simplest, cheaper, and more portable instrument was a compass with raised sights, which was graduated in degrees, which could be eyeballed to a quarter of a degree.

Today's theodolite compasses, using two scales, each with interpolation verniers, permit measurements to the nearest second. Digital versions immediately display the angle without any need for visual interpolations and related calculations using analog verniers. Models with built-in electronic log books record the measured angles and distances for immediate data processing, including closure computations and coordinates for use in plotting boundary maps or plats.

Simplicity of N.B. Baldwin deeds

Even before reading the above Backsights article, I came to the conclusion that the two N.B. Baldwin deeds were barely more evolved than the "grunt and wave" oral deeds of pre-literate, pre-industrial civilization. The deeds themselves are evidence of literacy, technology, and bureaucracy, as the deeds were written on forms printed on a letter press for official use. But the descriptions on the N.B. Baldwin deeds show no evidence of the use of the sort of survey instruments or methods that were familiar in some other communities at the time -- in Kentucky as well as other states.

The descriptions on the N.B. Baldwin deeds are of the most primitive type. They identify the "points and lines" of the perimeter in only the simplest terms. The "points" are all geographical or cultural features, some of which could significantly change or be entirely lost in the near future if not the next day. The lines are characterized only by their bearings on an 8-point compass. Anyone with eyes could see the points. A hand-held magnetic compass might have been used to measure the bearings, but a seasoned farmer or woodsman -- with or without a pocket watch -- could have guesstimated the bearings without a compass.

Conspicuously missing from the descriptions in both deeds are estimates of the distances between the points. No chains, much less tapes, were used to measure the distances. Nor were they paced off or even "eye-balled".

I have no idea of how surveying practices varied across the state of Kentucky around the turn of the 19th-20th centuries. But judging from from the N.B. Baldwin deeds, it was still possible -- in Jackson County -- to record a deed with a visual description of the "points and lines" that defined its boundary or perimeter in the manner of a "grunt and wave" survey.

The "points" in the deeds shown below consist mainly of geographical or "natural" features like streams, ridges, rocks, and trees, and man-made or "cultural" features like roads and fences, and possibly a stake in the ground or a surveyor's hub or two. The "lines" consist only of bearings expressed as simple cardinal directions like "north" or "southeast". Such "line of sight" descriptions required no measurements of distances whether with a surveyor's chain or tape, or as a number paces or even an "eyeball" estimate of the distance between what amounted to "turning points" or "corners". No angles were "turned" with a compass or transit between adjacent lines.

Partly in their favor, both deeds specify that the tract of land they describe is in the proximity of "Tearls [Terrells] Creek". But neither says where the "Beginning" point can be found in relation to a specific point on the creek. Terrells (or Terrell) Creek is still there today and can easily be found. Presumably it still flows in the same creek bed today as it did then. And presumably parts of the "county road" and "Branch" still exist in pretty much the same locations they did a century ago. Whatever "ridges" were referred to are probably still ridges, but a century is long enough for the terrain to produce a harvest or two of timber whether for lumber or firewood. Nothing in the description in either of the deeds, however, serves the purpose of locating the "Beginning" point. Only an old timer with a good memory, who was born after the deeds were recorded and had reason to become acquainted with the properties, might be able to reconstruct their perimeters.

And definitely in the favor of Deed 1, the description specifies 8-point compass bearings for all lines. With distances, one cannot draw the actual shape of the tract. But with points and bearings, one can draw a schematic of the property and determine if the angles close.

Boundary survey drawings

Today, a deed transferring title of a parcel or tract of land to a new owner would require that the boundaries be surveyed using instruments, either to confirm existing markers, or to establish markers based on earlier descriptions. The survey would result in a drawing or "plat" showing the precise boundaries of the lot, parcel, or tract to scale, which all the geometric measurements required to confirm the location of the land on the ground and compute it's precise area.

While technologies of measuring instruments and methods of keeping records and making computations have changed, the basic objectives and procedures are unchanged from those familiar from at least the 1700s. A good land survey required measuring the bearings and the lengths of the lines between points on the perimeter of the land.

In the "good old days" -- at the start of the 20th century in Jackson, Kentucky, and in many if not most other such rural communities -- anyone literate enough to write a description, and familiar enough with the legalese of a description -- could prepare a deed.

The writers of both Deeds 1 and 2 are clearly "schooled" in similar styles of calligraphy, and have learned the same argot then common in boundary descriptions. But the hands are clearly different, and the writer of Deed 1 is arguably more literate in terms.

  1. Spelling   Deed 2 has numerous spelling errors and inconsistencies.
  2. Punctuation and capitalization   Deed 1 runs "thence" phrases together with no commas or terminal punctuation, whereas Deed 1 clearly sets off "Thence" phrases with punctuation.
  3. Penmanship   Apart from its inferior spelling and punctuation, the description in Deed 2 is written with a somewhat more cramped hand in contrast with the fuller hand in Deed 1.

Parties that needed to make deeds of the kind shown here most likely either walked the perimeter of the property and made notes of its points and lines, or hired someone to do so, after which the notes were formally verbalized. I would guess that some contemporary Jackson County deeds included a sketch of the perimeter showing the points and lines described in the verbal description, in relation to surrounding natural and cultural features.

If the two N.B. Baldwin deeds examined here included such sketches, they did not survive with the copies of deeds shown here.

Top  

Commonalities

The particulars side-by-side

In this section I will compare and contrast the particulars of the 2 N.B. Baldwin deeds with an eye toward understanding what they share in common and how they differ.

After reading the deeds, one naturally wonders how the tracts might be related -- whether they are in the same area, perhaps very close to each other, possibly even cheek by jowl with a common line or two.

The fact that both tracts are located in the vicinity of Terrell Creek -- and both mention a "Branch" road and a "ridge" -- and both refer to bordering "Baldwin" and "Garland" and "Combs" lines or lands -- suggests that the tracts, if not the same, could very well have been contiguous. If N.B. Baldwin were to aspire to own two 40-acre tracts, for his own purposes, most likely he would want them to be adjacent to each other.

Dramatis personae

Deed 1

Margaret Baldwin
John R. Baldwin's 2nd wife (nee Howard), N.B. Baldwin's mother

N.B. [Newton Bascum] Baldwin
3rd son of Margaret Baldwin and John R. Baldwin

J.R. Baldwin
Margaret Howard's husband, N.B. Baldwin's father

E. Pennington
N.P.J.C. [Notary Public Jackson County]

D.G. Callier
Clerk Jackson C. C. [County Court]

H.M. Callier
D. C. [Deputy Clerk] Jackson C. C.

Deed 2

Henderson Reynolds & Son

Henderson Reynolds and his wife Annie Reynolds and Wm. B. Reynolds

N.B. [Newton Bascum] Baldwin
3rd son of John R. Baldwin and Margaret (Howard) Baldwin

H.C. Coombs
O.C.C. [Officer of the County Court

S.G. Moore
D.C.O.C.C. [Deputy Clerk, Officer of the County Court]

J.H. Reynolds
Paid some fees hence possibly related to Reynolds family.

H.C. Baldwin
Paid some fees for his brother N.B. Balwin.

Main cast

John R. Baldwin (1828-1909) and Margaret Baldwin (1835-1912), parents of N.B. Baldwin and H.C. Baldwin

N.B. Baldwin (1862-1919), J.R. Baldwin's 4th son and 3rd son with Margaret.

Henderson Reynolds (1838-1909), born and died in Kentucky, a resident of Owsley county, buried in Old Richard Reynolds Cemetery, Cow Creek, Owsley County, Kentucky (Find a Grave). The Reynolds family was among the first family of European-descent to permanently settle in the area.

Anna (Moore) Reynolds (1843-1916 Julia Ann, Annie), born and died in Kentucky, wife of Henderson Reynolds, is buried with him in Old Richard Reynolds Cemetery, Cow Creek, Owsley County, Kentucky (Find a Grave).

William Butler Reynolds (1884-1960), born in Kentucky, died in Indiana, buried in Cow Creek Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Cow Creek, Owsley County, Kentucky (Find a Grave.

Henry Clay Baldwin (1867-1950), J.R. Baldwin's 7th son and 6th son with Margaret, N.B. Baldwin's 3rd younger brother. He was born in Laurel county, but was residing in Annville in Jackson county when he died, and he is buried their with his wife Linda (Abrams) Baldwin (1880-1950) in Medlock Cemetery in Annville. She passed away 2 months after he died. In 1913, H.C. acquired an 8-acre parcel of land from N.B.

Geography

Deed 1

Jackson county, Kentucky

Tearls creek on the Stablefield branch in the Ballard Smith Survey

County road

Deed 2

Jackson county, Kentucky

London, Ky

Seat of Laurel county, immediately south-southwest of Jackson county.

Owsley county, Ky

Immediately east of Jackson county. The county seat is Boonville. The county is known for its coalfields, small population, and poverty.

the waters of Tearls Creek

the ground Near the Branch

Jackson County Jackson county surrounded by its parents
Copped and cropped from Counties in Kentucky
Wikipedia map by U.S. Census Bureau employee

Counties, creeks, and branches

Jackson county sits in the middle of a circle of 7 counties -- Estill (north-northeast), Lee (northeast), Owsley (east), Clay (south-southeast), Laurel (south-southwest), Rockcastle (west), and Madison (north-northwest). It's county seat is McKee, and its largest town in Annville. It's population in the 1900s when the dees shown here were recorded was about 10,500. Its population as I write this in 2019 is about 13,500.

Tearls appears to be a phonetic spelling of "Terrells" or "Terrell's" or "Terrell" -- which survives today in the name of a creek and related roads in the vicinity of the southern boundary of Jackson county and neighboring Clay and Laurel counties.

Stablefield branch eludes me. It appears to be a larger stream in a watershed that includes Terrells Creek. The locality described in the deed is just inside Jackson County north of its boundary with Clay county, near the nook where Jackson, Clay, and Laurel counties meet (see map). Parts of Terrells Creek and Terrels Creek Road appear to run along parts of this boundary.

Baldwin Branch and Baldwin Branch Rd. are south-southeast of the town of Annville in the southern part of Jackson County. Pond Creek flows through the southern part of the town.

Homes along what is now called Baldwin Creek Rd. originally had local post office addresses. Later they had Route 2 addresses. Today they have Annville addresses. I do not know when the address systems changed.

Ballard Smith Survey appears to refer to a survey of lands warranted by the Commonweath of Virginia to Ballard Smith (c1753-1794) in the late 1780s. Smith, a Virginian, served as a Major in Virginia's militia during the Revolutionary War, after which some veterans like him were granted large tracts of land in what later became the state of Kentucky. Kentucky was establish as a county of Virginia, in the reaches of Virginia west of the Appalachians, in 1776. Kentucky county was split into Fayette, Jefferson, and Lincoln counties in 1780. Smith's warrants, issued during the late 1780s, are recorded in both Jefferson and Lincoln counties. Kentucky was approved for statehood in 1791, and the next year it became the 15th state of the Union, a commonwealth like Virginia. The original large counties were broken into smaller counties, which later contributed to the birth of smaller more counties. Jackson county was established in 1858 from parts of 6 of the 7 counties (all but Clay) that surround it today. A regional survey of land associated with Ballard Smith appears to have been conducted in 1855. Perhaps this survey identified "Tearls [Terrell?] creek" if not also the "Stablefield branch" in what soon became Jackson County. See Maj. Ballard Smith at WeRelate.org for particulars (viewed 25 October 2019).

Baldwin Branch Baldwin Branch Rd. and Terrell Creek Rd. topographical map
Cropped from screen capture of map at Topozone
"Free USGS Topo Maps for the Entire United States"
Baldwin Branch Baldwin Branch Rd. and Terrell Creek Rd. aerial photograph
Cropped from screen capture of Landsat photograph
provided by Google Maps
Baldwin Branch and Terrell Creek Note the different spellings -- "Terrells Creek Rd" and "Terrel Creek Rd"
It seems that "Baldwin Branch Rd" should label the road along the "Baldwin Branch" of Terrells Creek
Terrells Creek and Baldwin Branch roads south-southeast of Annville Kentucky
On border of Jackson County with Laurel (lower left) and Clay (bottom and lower right) counties
Screen capture cropped from map generated on 30 June 2010
Copyright 2010 by James Baugn at LandmarkHunter.com

RightBaldwin Branch Rd and Terrells Creek Rd
in relation to Royrader and Dartha post offices

Centering on Baldwin Branch Rd
Note the spelling of "Terrells Creek Rd
Note the location of "Baldwin Branch Rd"

Screen captures cropped from map generated by Kentucky HometownLocator

BelowPost office communities often named in Jackson County Baldwin-Steele records
Centering on Annville, which today includes addresses on Baldwin Branch Rd

Baldwin Branch and Terrell Creek
Baldwin Branch and Terrell Creek

Baldwin Branch and Terrell Creek

Numerous names of creeks and roads in Kentucky contain the word "branch". If in the name of a creek, it signifies that the creek is a tributary to a larger creek or river downstream. If a road, it most likely means one along such a creek.

Family names associated with place names in Kentucky, like elsewhere, are usually well-known national or state figures, or local people being recognized for their historical presence or contribution to the locality, as landowners, industrialists, politicians, whatever.

John R. Baldwin, like many people who migrated from outside the state, bringing their families and ambitions, during the early or middle decades of the 19th century, and gained modest reputations, possibly as land owners, found themselves the namesakes of creeks roads that happened to run by or through their farms.

This seems to be the case with the naming of Baldwin Branch Rd. along the Baldwin Branch tributary to Terrell Creek -- which originates in both Jackson and Clay counties then flows westward along the border of southern Jackson County and northern Clay County. Shortly after the mouth of the Baldwin Branch, Terrell Creek turns south into the northeast corner of Laurel County, and empties into the South Fork of the Rockcastle River, a tributary of the Cumberland River, which spills into Ohio River just before the Ohio River, coming down along the northwest border of Kentucky with Illinois, is joined by the Tennessee River and flows into the Mississippi.

The Ohio and Tennessee rivers, flowing generally westward, drain the watersheds of Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio north of Kentucky, and Kentucky and Tennessee to the south of Kentucky, all west of the Appalachians, into the southward flowing Mississippi, which drains the states to its east and west as it flows south from Minnessota to Louisiana, where it empties itno the Gulf of Mexico.

What this means is that -- all the water collected in ponds, pumpled from wells, and consumed by livestock and people on Baldwin farms in Jackson County, and urinated into fields and barnyards and outhouses, ended up in the Gulf of Mexico, from which it mixed with the waters of the Atlantic -- all of which ultimately, over the eons, will flow, evaporate, and precipitate around the globe as it warms, the oceans rise, and typhoons multipy in number and intensity.

All this because John R. Baldwin and Margaret Howard, after the birth of N.B. Baldwin on 24 December 1862, and before the birth of James A. Baldwin on 23 April 1864 -- sometime in 1863, during the Civil War, shortly after neutralist Kentucky began supporting the Union -- moved from Virginia to Kentucky.

Family history is all about history.

Dartha post office

Jackson County, like other counties in Kentucky, and like other administrative districts throughout the United States, had numerous post offices. Post offices in cities and larger towns were managed by full-time postmasters.

Some post offices became namesakes for census enumeration areas. Enumerations sheets for post offices include people who used the post office as their address, in lieu of street or other such addresses.

The social pages of newspapers like The Citizen, published in Berea in Madison County, local happenings by county and, within a county, by post office. The 24 October 1907 edition of The Citizen reported in an article dated "Oct. 15" -- under "Datha" in the "Jackson" section of the "East Kentucky Correspondence" column -- that "Sam Baldwin is on the sick list" and "Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Garland were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Baldwin on Sunday" (The Citizen, 24 October 1907, page 8).

The following post offices of interest are all "historical" post offices that operated over different periods of time.

  • Datha 1905-1954
    Southeast of Annville
  • Royrader 1927-1969
    To the west of and near Datha
    South-southeast of Annville
  • Pond Creek 1875-1880
    In Annville
  • Moores Creek 1885-1984
    Southwest of Annville
    West-northwest of Royrader and Datha

Route 2 and Baldwin Branch Rd

Natural features

Deed 1

a stone at the county road near Jessie Taylor old house site
a stone at the road [in the Nancy Combs line]

a small sour wood
a sour wood on the end point
four chestnuts
a persimmon tree near the road

the top of the ridge
the hollow
the end point

Deed 2

a popular
a chestnut

the top of the ridge
the meanders of the ridge

Cultural (manmade) features and neighbors

Deed 1

a stone at the county road
the road in the Nancy Combs line
a stone at the road
the county road

the Jessie Taylor old house site

Baldwin land
Baldwin and Garland land
Corneleis, Moore, Garland, and Baldwin land

Morhed [Moorehead?] line
Nancy Combs line

Deed 2

a marker set in the ground near the Branch

to the corner of the fence thence with the fence

with J.R. Baldwin line to Andy Combs's line
to said [Andy] Combs line at the corner of the fence
with the meanders of the ridge to the B.F. Garland line

Lines and lands

Could the "Andy Combs line" in Deed 2 be related to the "Nancy Combs line" in Deed 1?

A certain Andrew Jackson Combs (1842-1923) resided in Owsley county. His mother was Tennessee-born Nancy Ann (Cornett) Combs (1803-1881). Could the property marked by the "Nancy Combs line" reflect an inheritance that passed to her son, thus becoming the "Andy Combs line"?

A Kentucky-born Andrew Jackson Combs, identified as "Andy" on the death certificate of his and Nancy's daughter Malinda (Combs) Cole (1847-1921), is buried in Combs Cemetery in Pebworth, Owsley County (Find a Grave). His mother, Kentucky-born (or Tennessee-born) Nancy Ann (Cornett) Combs, is buried in Combs Campbell Cemetery in Owsley County (Find a Grave). See Nancy Combs line under Deed 1 above.

The B.F. Garland line in this deed appears to be related to the Garland land in Deed 1.

Points and lines

Deed 1

The boundaries of the deeded tract are described with the bearings of 7 lines between 7 points. Some lines are straight, others meander.

  1. Tract on Tearls creek
    on the Stablefield branch in the Ballard Smith Survey
    bounded as follows.
  2. Beginning
    From stone at county road near Jessie Taylor old house
    Then southeastwardly
  3. To small sour tree on ridge top
    Then nearly same south eastwardly direction across hollow
  4. To sour tree on point of ridge
    Then eastwardly on straight line
  5. To four chestnuts in line between Baldwin and Garland line
    Then along same line northwardly
  6. To Corneleis, Moore, Garland, and Baldwin land
    Then westwardly with Morhed line
  7. To persimmon tree near Nancy Combs line
    Then westwardly
  8. To stone at the road
    Then southwestwardly with county road
  9. To beginning
    Containing about 42 acres

Deed 2

The boundaries of the deeded tract are described with the bearings of 7 lines between 7 points. Some lines are straight, others meander.

  1. A certain tract on parcel of land
    lying in Jackson County, Kentucky,
    on the waters of Tearls Creek
    and bounded as follows.
  2. Beginning
    On a popular
    Then westwardly with J.R. Baldwin line
  3. To [Toward?] Andy Combs line
    < And continuing >
  4. To a marker set in the ground near the Branch
    Then on a straight line
  5. To a chestnut coming to said Combs line
    at the corner of the fence
    Then with the fence
  6. To the top of the ridge
    Then with the meanders of the ridge
  7. To the B.F. Garland line
    Then with the Garland line
  8. To Beginning
    Containing about 40 acres

Plats

Deed 1 plat Schematic drawing of tract described in N.B. Baldwin Deed 1
Drawn by William Wetherall, October 2019

Neither of the N.B. Baldwin deeds included a drafted or sketched representation of the tract of land described in the deeds. Deed 2 -- lacking both distances and bearings -- would not make sense to someone who was not familiar with the neighboring properties, and/or could not find the starting point on the ground, spot the described features, and walk the perimeter. Deed 1, while lacking distances between points or corners, gives 8-point compass bearings for all lines, which permits anyone with a basic understanding of compass geometry to sketch the shape of the perimeter -- as I have done in the image to the right.

The geometric logic is as follows.

Line    Bearing
Beginning
Stone on county road described in 7-1 as running southwest
1-2    Southeast hence 90-degree left turn off 7-1
2-3    Southeast hence 0-degree turn off 1-2
3-4    East hence 45-degree left turn off 2-3
4-5    North hence 90-degree left turn off 3-4
5-6    East hence 90-degree left turn off 4-5
6-7    East hence 0-degree turn off 5-6
7-1    Southwest hence 45-degree left turn off 6-7

Beginning

Closure

Traverses of loops, beginning and ending on the same point, have to close in terms of both the angles turned at the corners or points in the course of the traverse, and the distances between the points along the perimeter of the traverse. The accuracy of the survey is determined by computing the gap between the beginning and ending points.

Because Deed 1 gives no distances, the actual shape, perimeter, and acreage of the described tract cannot be determined. Assuming that the tract is actually 42-acres "more-or-less" as stated, then we can imagine any number of shapes that contain this much acreage -- such as a square roughly 1,350 (about 0.25 miles) on a side -- which, if fenced, would require roughly 5,400 feet (about 1 mile) of fencing.

Computing angular closer from the received bearings, however, is a no-brainer. All the bearings are stated as 8-point compass bearings, which represent multiples of 45 degrees. The turns could include both clockwise (right) turns, and counter-clockwise (left) turns. Whether all right (plus) or all left (minus) turns, the angles have to add up to 360 degrees -- plus if traversing the loop clockwise -- negative if, as in Deed 1, it is counter-clockwise.

The sum of the angles turned (deflected) along the perimeter described in Deed 1 is 360 degrees.
So the turns of the traverse close, but nothing can be said about distances.

In an actual survey using a real compass, probably none of the bearings would be true cardinal directions -- and probably none of the corners would be exactly 45 or 90 degrees. The ridge, the fence, and the road would probably not be perfectly straight.

On parcels as large as 40 acres, turning angles with a simple 360 degree compass will produce angle closure errors on the order of plus or minus a few degrees. Using a rod, chain, or tape to measure the lines will incur linear closure errors on the order of plus or minus a few feet.

Angular and linear errors compound each other. The circumference (perimeter) of a 1-meter (foot, yard, mile) radius circle is roughly 6.28 meters (feet, yards, miles) or 0.017 meters (feet, yards, miles) per degree. So a 100-meter (foot, yard, mile) line on a bearing that is 1-degree off will be 1.7 meters (feet, yards, miles) off by the end of the line.

Using state-of-the art contemporary instruments and survey methods would have been more accurate, but doing a higher quality survey on a 40-acre tract of farm land in a mountainous area would have been too costly considering the value of the land. Rural land deeds at the time were mostly about "more or less".

There is nothing "casual" about the deeds themselves. Both are written in conventional legalese, though by writers with obviously different levels of literacy. Deed 1 comes the closest to being a proper description based on geometric particulars (angles and distances), whereas most lines in Deed 2 dispense with even bearings -- taking for granted familiarity with the locations and names of neighboring lines.

Top  

Proximity

Are the tracts contiguous?

The tracts in Deeds 1 and 2 would be contiguous if their shared at least part of one border (line), or even if they had a common corner (point). The two tracts do have several names in common and both involve a ridge and a "Branch". However, the "Combs" or "Garland" or even the "Baldsin" property in one deed could refer to a different part of the tract, or to a different tract owned by the same person, or by a relative of the person, if not by an unrelated person with the same name. What may matter here is that out of all the names mentioned in both deeds, no less than or something with the same name.a different in the name of the same person if not of a son or other relative or family of the same nameproperty associated with a name could be different parts of the property, or to different properties owned by the same person to multiple properties of the same person othere are many small ridges in what is a very wrinkled terrain -- and some names would be They are certainly not congruent. They

Top  

40 acres and a mule

The significance of a quarter-quarter section

What is the significance of 40 acres? Most people in the United States today would prabably be hard pressed to envision the size of an "acre", and a "section" is even less familiar as a measurement of land. Generations that grew up on farms homesteaded on early land grants, however, understood that a "section" was a square-mile of land that consisted of 640 acres. Sections were subdivided into "half sections" (320 acres) and "quarter sections" (160 acres), eighth sections (80 acres), sixteenth (quarter-quarter) sections (40 acres) -- "more or less" as early surveys were mostly about marking corners within so-called "townships" -- which consisted of a square grid of 36 sections, 6 sections on a side.

By the middle of 19th century, "40 acres" had become the minimum and most common size of a tract of land within the rapidly developing territories were carved out of lands that fell under federal government control. Terms like "front 40" and "back 40" referred to a the front and back tracts of an 80-acre parcel of land. A 40-acre tract could be halved to 20, a 20 to 10, and a 10 to 5, which made land reckoning easy -- when all you had to do was pace off -- and then fence off -- an area between visible landmarks like rocks, trees, and stream beds.

"Townships" are commonly denoted on the early censuses of states that were populated mainly through settlements on lands acquire through federal or state grants.

A unit of length called a "chain" was defined as 22 yards (66 feet), and a surveyor's "chain" folded into 100 links. An acre was 10-square chains -- 10 * 66ft * 66ft -- or 43,560 square feet.

A more familiar, easily visualized area today is a "football field" -- which doesn't define itself. A standard "American football field" is 360 feet long including the end zones, and 160 feet wide. That works out to 57,600 square feet -- which is 1.32 acres. The area without the end zones -- 300ft by 120 feet -- is 48,000 square feet or 1.10 acre. Either way, a "football field" is roughly 1 acre.

So think of the "42 acre" and "40 acre" tracts of land described in the following deeds as roughly the size of 40 football fields -- "more or less".

That's "40 acres and a mule" -- all that a free man was deemed to need to support himself and a family back in the days when most people in the United States farmed for a living.

Top  

History of surveying

How land was measured then and now

I confess to having a certain fascinating for surveying and property descriptions. I've logged a few hundred hours behind a transit, first in surveying classes as a engineering student, then in a summer work with the Department of Navy (yes, I'm that old) in which I helped collumate the beams of ship-to-air guided missile radar systems at San Francisco Naval Shipyard (Hunters Point), and finally in several summers on survey crews with the Tahoe National Forest in Northern California, the last two summers with my own crew. If this wasn't enough.

If this wasn't enough, my father -- an attorney in Nevada City and Grass Valley, neighborhing towns in Nevada County, in the heart of the Mother Lode of California, which includes the heart of the Tahoe National Forest in the California watershed of the Sierra Mountains -- saw his share of property disputes involviong old surveys of the kind that passed muster during the late 19th century following the California Gold Rush. In principle he didn't talk about his practice or otherwise involve any of our family in his work. But after he "retired" from his office in town to the back bedroom where I shared a bunk with my kid brother until we went off to college, when home for a visit I would sometimes ride along with him when he went out to inspect a contested property, with old deeds and survey plats in hand. Forest service surveyors, too, sometimes had to work out the locations of lines of old surveys describing land involved in land swaps or clarifications of boundaries between federal and state or private land. Most disputes were solved amicably as parties understood the ambiguities of older surveys. Occasionally a dispute when to court, and a judged dictated a resolution.

History of surveying

One enterprising title insurance website has posted an utterly fascinating (for me) article on the history of surveying, which begins with a depiction of how early man -- possible advanced Neanderthals stretch of land might have been claimed and described 200,000 years ago -- with little more than a grunt and wave of the hand Article from Backsights Magazine published by Surveyors Historical Society, as reprinted from the Autumn 1986 issue of Reflections, a publication of First American Title Insurance Company.

Surveying and title companies

The heart of a deed in which one party transfers the title of a tract of land to another party is the description of the property. Today, practically all real estate transactions are mediated by 3rd-party title companies, which confirm the identities of the concerned parties, their rights to convey and receive the concered property, the boundaries of the concerned property, and whether the property is free from claims by other parties, including owners of adjacent properties, banks, insurance companies, tax agencies, trusts that may include the property, and other parties that might have reason to objectt to or block the transaction, The title company may also confirm the measures the parties make for payment for the property, and payment or transaction fees and taxes. A title company, in other words, "clears" a real estate transaction for "closure" -- and typically, when closed, it files the paperwork required to record the new deed at the local county recorder's office or court with jurisdiction.

Local practices differed in the past, just as they differ today.

Top  

Family ties

What deeds can tell us about a community

The graves shown here are of members of the family of James Alfred Baldwin (1864-1954) and his wife Nancy Ann McGee (1874-1946). James was the first younger brother of this writer's (William O. Wetherall's) father's (William B. Wetherall's) maternal grandfather N.B. (Newton Bascum) Baldwin. James A. Baldwin was therefore my father's great uncle and my great-great uncle.

James A. Baldwin appears to be the sibling with whom N.B. Baldwin remained the closest, in that deeds concerning N.B. Baldwin's land turned up in the possession of two different lines of Baldwin-McGee descendants still living in Kentucky.

Top  

Successors to N.B. Baldwin land

G.W. Moore, Chester Hacker, Roy Baldwin

Hacker's Steele wife an in-law relative of N.B. and Roy

Ross E. Murray, a 3rd cousin descendant of the Baldwin-Howard union in the line of J.R. Baldwin's son James A. Baldwin, a brother of N.B. Baldwin, did a quick search of Jackson County, Kentucky deeds related to N.B. Baldwin's properties and reported as follows (communition from Ross's mother B.J. Baldwin Rudder, 5 November 2019, [bracketed] remarks mine).

N.B. Baldwin obtained his land on Baldwin Branch from his mother Margaret Baldwin (42 acres) [Deed 1] and Henderson Reynolds, Annie Reynolds and Willaim Reynolds (40 acres . . . . I didn't look but I suspect that the 40 acres was actually originally Baldwin land [owned by his father J.R. Baldwin]) [Deed 2]. He deeds off a few small parcels, but sold the bulk to G. W. Moore (80 acres). Mr. Moore sold it to Jackson Hacker. Jackson Hacker sold the farm to [N.B. Baldwin's brother] Roy Baldwin in 1936. See attached.

80 acres

80 acres is 1/8th of a section, which is generally regarded as about 1 square mile. So 80 acres would be 1/8th (0.125) square miles -- a tract of land 1 mile long and 1/8th mile wide, or 1/2 mile long and 1/4th mile wide, or about 0.3546 miles (roughly 1/3rd mile) on a side. It would take about 45 minutes to walk the 2.25 mile perimeter at a rate of 3 miles/hour.

The attachment the following image of a printout listing several Jackson County deeds showing N.B. Baldwin as either a "grantor" or "grantee".

Baldwin deed successors Record of deeds involving N.B. Baldwin as grantor or grantee in Jackson County, Kentucky
From the office of Jackson County Clerk Donald "Duck" Moore, McKee, Kentucky
Provided by Ross E. Murray and BJ Baldwin Rudder

I have already shown and discussed the 2 deeds that describe the larger parcels of land, which I have called Deed 1 (42 acres) and Deed 2 (40 acres). The dates shown on the deeds differ somewhat from the dates shown on the printout. I have noted these differences in the Time lines table (above).

My interest here is who gained title to N.B. Baldwin's properties after he left Kentucky. The above records show that he received as grantee, and transferred as grantor, titles to several parcels or tracts of land, including the acreage described in Deed 1 and Deed 2.

Here I will comment on the succession of title holders to the "2 tracts" of land associated with "Terrils Cr." deeded to G.W. Moore on 1 March 1913 -- namely, G.W. Moore, Jackson Hackers, and Roy Baldwin.

Top  

G.W. Moore

Jackson County was home to numerous Moore families, and several of the Moore families were related. The name may have been the most common in the county.

Deed 1 lists "Moore" as a fence neighbor, but I have no idea which Moore.

Only one "G.W. Moore" appears to be closely associated with Pond Creek in Jackson county. If he was G.W. Moore who acquired title to the 2 large tracts of N.B. Baldwin's land in 1913, then he was nearly 72 at the time and would die 3 years and 8 months later.

A "G. W. Moore" is listed as the postmaster of Tyner in Jackson County with a compensation of $35.00 as of 1 July 1895 according to a roster of postmasters (Official Register of the United States, containing a list of Officers and Employees of the Civil, Military, and Naval Service on the First of July, 1895; together with a List of Vessels Belong to the United States , Volume II, The Post-Office Department and the Postal Service, page 143, Ancestry.com images).

The 1900 census for Magisterial District 3, Pond Creek, in Jackson County shows "Geo. W. Moore" 59, Mar 1841, a Kentucky-born farmer, with his wife "America J." 60, Nov 1839, a daughter 20 and son 14, his mother-in-law 83, and an adopted daughter 12. They have been married 32 years, and 7 of her 8 children survive. The son is described as "feeble minded". The same enumeration sheet shows 4 Moore households in a row.

The 1910 census for Magisterial District 3 of Jackson County shows "George W." 69 and "Armenia" 70 as the father and mother of the head of household "Edward Moore" 34, who is listed with his wife "Attilia" 31 and 7 children. George W. and Armenia have been married 47 years and 6 of her 8 children survive. Edward and Attilia have been married 12 years and 7 of her 8 children, none of them twins, survive. There are Moores galore on the same, preceding, and following enumeration sheets.

The 17 April 1910 issue of The Citizen, published in Berea in Jackson County, reported that Mr. Ed Vaughn purchased a half interest in the Moore-Bullock lumber company, which became the Moore & Vaughn lumber company. G.W. Moore's wife's maiden name was Bullock. The same article reports that "Anyone wishing to buy seed potatoes would do well to call on G.W. Moore as he has got 20 bushels for sale." It also reports that "Mr. and Mrs. G.W. Moore were visiting at Mildred Sunday." (East Kentucky Correspondence, page 8)

George Washington Moore, born in Jackson County on 6 March 1841, died in Jackson County on 11 November 1916. He is buried in Tyner West Cemetery in Tyner in Jackson County.

Arminia Jane Bullock, born in Jackson County on 2 November 1839, died in Jackson on 6 January 1929, and is buried in Tyner West Cemetery in Tyner, Jackson County, apparently with G.W. Moore.

Top  

Jackson Hacker

I do not know when Jackson Hacker acquired title to N.B. Baldwin's former acreage from G.W. Moore or his heirs. But the following Jackson Hacker is a plausbile candidate for the next title holder. Coincidentally, his wife -- nee Martha Ellen Steele -- was a niece of N.B. Baldwin's wife -- also nee Martha Ellen Steele. As such, she was a 1st cousin of my paternal grandmother, so her grandchildren are my 2rd cousins.

The 1900 census for Pond Creek, Jackson County, Kentucky shows "Jackey Hacker", age 10, born August 1889, as the son of Morgan Hacker 34, Mar 1866, a farmer, and his wife Mary 30, May 1870. The couple had been married 14 years, and Mary had given birth to 5 children of whom 3 survived -- Jackey and his younger brothers, James, 8, Mar 1892, and Pearl, 2, April 1898 -- who are also shown on this census. Among their neighbors on the same sheet is the houshold of John Longsworth.

The 1920 census for Pond Creek shows "Jackson Hacker" 28 farming with his wife "Ellen" 27 and 2 sons and 2 daughters. He is faming on a general farm, and she is a farm laborer on a home farm -- which means that she is working with him. On the same enumeration sheet is the household of William Longsworth 44, his wife Minnie 38, and 7 children and a sister. The 4 older children, ages 18 to 11 years old, and their mother, are farm laborers on a home farm.

The 1930 census shows Jack and Ellen Hacker, both 38, married 17 years, still farming in Pond Creek with 9 children -- 6 sons and 3 daughters -- 19 to 1-11/12 years old -- 5 more children than they had in the 1920 census. None of the children were twins.

The 1940 census shows the Hackers still living in Magisterial District 3 with 7 children, the youngest a 6-year-old daughter born since the 1930 census, which means that they had at least 10 children. The parents have had 5-years of education. The oldest daughter on this census, 28, has had 6 years of schooling. 3 sons aged 20, 18, and 16 finished only the 8th grade and were classified "new worker". A 14-year old daughter with a 6th-grade education was a farm laborer.

Hacker-Steele graves

Jackson Hacker, born on 29 August 1891, died on 2 June 1950. Also known as "Jackey", he is buried as "Jack Hacker" in Hacker Cemetery in Jackson County.

Martha Ellen Hacker, nee Steele, born on 26 Februray 1892, died on 9 November 1977. She is buried as "Ellen Hacker" in Hacker Cemetery with a tombstone similar in design to Jack Hacker's stone.

See Steele-Grubb graves for the tombs of Jackson Hacker and his wife Martha Ellen Steele.

Top  

James Henry Steele

Martha Ellen (Steele) Hacker

Martha Ellen (Steele) Hacker (1892-1977, better known as "Ellen", was a daughter of James Henry Steele (1848-1923) and his 2nd wife, nee Sophia Peters (1865-1941). James married Sophia in Jackson County on 11 October 1888 some 10 months after the death of his 1st wife nee Caroline Taylor (1850-1888), on 14 January. James Henry Steele was the 4th son of Jonas Steele (1815-1868) and Elizabeth Grubb (1820-1888), and an older brother of Martha Ellen (Steele) Baldwin (1863-1943), my paternal great grandmother, who also went by Ellen. Martha Ellen, the daughter of James H. Steele, was therefore a first cousin to the children of her namesake aunt Martha Ellen (Steele) Baldwin -- namely the Baldwin sisters, including my father's mother Ida Baldwin. Her children with Jackson Hacker were my father's 2nd cousins, and her grandchildren are my 3rd cousins.

The 1880 census for Pond Creek shows "James H. Steele" 31 with his wife "Caroline" 29 and 4 children -- "Eliza E." 8, "Alexander R." 5, "William H." 2, and "James H." 6/12 years old.

Caroline B. Steele, nee Taylor, died on 14 January 1888.

The 1900 census for Pond Creek shows "Martha E." 8, Feb 1892, as the daughter of "James Steel" 51, April 1849, and his wife "Sophia" 34, Dec 1865, with 8 children. They had been married 11 years, and all 5 of Sophia's children, aged 10 to 2, survived. Martha E. was 2nd child James Steele had fathered with Sophia. The three older children in the household -- "William" 22, "Ad" 20, and "Emma" 15 -- were children James had fathered with his first wife, Caroline.

The 1910 census for Magisterial District 3 (Pond Creek) shows "James Steele" 61 with his wife "Sopha" 44 and 8 children. The census records that the marriage was his 2nd and her 1st. They had been married 21 years and all 9 of Sophia's children survived. 7 of the children in the household are hers. The oldest child, "Add" 30, is James Steele's son from his 1st marriage with Caroline Taylor (1850-1888).

The 1920 census for Pond Creek shows "James H. Steele" 70, with his wife "Sofa" 54, and their 3 youngest children, son "Cath" 16, daughter "Samantha" 13, and son "Lester" 10. James H. is farming on a general farm, and his wife and their children are farm laborers on a home farm.

James H. Steele died on 15 January 1923.

The 1930 census for District 3 of Laurel County shows "Sophia Steele" 64 as a widow living with her son-in-law "Bob M. Wilson" 33, who is farming, and her daughter "Samantha" 23. The census notes that Sophia was 23 when she married, while her son-in-law and daughter were respectively 27 and 16 when they married.

The 1940 census for Magisterial District 3 of Laurel County shows "Sophia [Still, Steel]" 72 as the mother-in-law of "Robert Wilson" 44, who is still farming with his wife "Samantha" 33. The Wilsons have no children. Robert, Samantha, and Sophia have completed respectively 7, 6, and 0 years of school.

Steele-Taylor/Powers graves

James Henry Steele (1849-1923), born in Whitley County, Kentucky, on 7 April 1849, died in Laurel County on 15 January 1923. He is buried in Hacker Cemetery in Jackson County.

James Steele's 1st wife, nee Caroline B. Taylor, born in Kentucky on 14 June 1850, died in Kentucky on 14 January 1888. She is buried as Caroline B. Steele (1850-1888), also in Hacker Cemetery.

James Steele's 2nd wife, nee Sophia Peters, born in Kentucky in 1865, died in Kentucky in 1941. She is buried as Sophia Steele (1865-1941) in Elza-Swanner Cemetery in Greenmount in Laurel County, Kentucky.

See Steele-Grubb graves for the tombs of James H. Steele and his 1st and 2nd wives Caroline Taylor and Sophia Peters.

See 11. Steele-Grubb for an overview of the Jonus and Elizabeth (Grubb) Steele family and related censuses.

Top  

Roy Baldwin

Roy Eldon Baldwin (1906-1980) was born in November 1906, half a year after his uncle N.B. Baldwin (1862-1919) acquired the 40-acre tract of land from the Hendersons (Deed 2). He was 6 when N.B. acquired the 42-acre tract from Margaret Baldwin in 1913, and 12 when N.B. died in 1919. And he turned 30 in 1936 when he is said to have gained title to both tracts, apparently from Jackson Hacker, who was then around 45.

Top  

Collateral lines

Blood and in-law relatives

Steele-Grubb and Baldwin-Howard clans

The following tree shows parallel relationships between selected lines of descent from the Steele-Grubb and Baldwin-Howard unions. I have highlighted the cousins who directly exchanged information about the N.B. Baldwin deeds -- myself (William O. Wetherall, my 2nd cousin once removed B.J. Rudder, and my 3rd cousins Lois McWhorter, Ross Murray, and B.J.'s friend (nee Hacker).

The following tree is preliminary. I plan to add at least the collateral lines of (1) William H. Baldwin (mother Margaret Howard), who settled in Idaho a few years before N.B. Baldwin, and (2) John Milton Baldwin (mother Rebecca Howard), who settled in Wyoming.

0. Steele-Grubb           Baldwin-Howard
   Jonas ___ Elizabeth    John R. ___ Margaret
   Steel  |  Grubb        Baldwin  |  Howard
      ____|____              ______|_____
     |         |            |            |
1. James     Martha       Newton      James       Nancy
   Henry     Ellen ______ Bascum      Alfred _____Ann
   Steele    Steele  |    Baldwin     Baldwin  |  McGee
     |               |                    _____|____
     |               |                   |          |
2. Martha         Ida                 Roy         Walter
   Ellen          Mae                 Eldon       Raleigh
   (Steele)       (Baldwin)           Baldwin     Baldwin
   Hacker         Wetherall           (Oma)       (Edith)
     |               |                   |          |
3. Robert "Bob"   William B.          Hazel       B.J.
   Hacker         Wetherall           (Baldwin)   (Baldwin)
     |               |                Gill        Rudder 
     |               |                   |          | 
4. Daughter       William O.          Lois        Ross
   (Hacker)       Wetherall           McWhorter   Murray
   B.J. friend       |                   |          | 
     |               |                   |          | 
5. Children       Saori               Children    Children
     |            Tsuyoshi               |          | 
     |               |                   |          | 
     |               |                   |          | 
6. Grand          Anri                Grand       Grand
   children       Tatsuki             children    children
     |               |                   |          | 

Note that, for me (William O. Wetherall), Martha Ellen (Steele) Hacker is a 1st cousin twice removed, and B.J.'s friend (nee Hacker) is a 3rd cousin, by blood. For Lois and Ross, however, Ellen Hacker is a 1st cousin twice removed by law, and B.J.'s friend is also an "in law" cousin.

Plot thickens

After discovering that Jackson Hacker's wife was "Martha Ellen (Steele) Hacker" -- N.B. Baldwin's niece -- I informed B.J. (Baldwin) Rudder of this finding and asked her if she had any Hacker cousins on her local radar -- whether blood or in-law cousins. B.J. is my father's 2nd blood cousin on his Baldwin side, and Ellen Hacker was his 2nd cousin on his Steele side. Hence B.J. and Ellen were 2nd cousins "in law" rather than by blood. Well, B.J. happens to have a friend whose maiden name is "Hacker", and she asked her friend about the possibility of a connection. This was her friend's reply (Messenger, 8 November 2019, boxed note mine).

Yes, that's where Bob Hacker [my father] was born. He always loved to go back there and visit with Roy and Oma [Baldwin], because he felt at home there. I can remember going with him and Mom when they went to visit your uncle [Roy Baldwin]. That's why Roy had a picture of Bob Hacker in his wallet when he passed away. They were close friends. Later, Jack (or Jackson) Hacker and Martha Ellen Steele Hacker acquired the Steele homeplace where Bill (Sissy) and Bernan Hacker's (Dora) heirs now live and own. The Hackers probably sold the land to Roy and Oma when they moved to the Steele homeplace.

Bill Hacker (1946–2018 wife Sissy) and Bernard "Bernan" Hacker (1945-2013 wife Dora Peters) were sons of Levi Hacker (1921-1994) and Pearl (Reed) Hacker (1924–1986). Levi Hacker is Robert "Bob" Hacker's closest older brother. Robert is "Star" and "Starr" in the 1930 and 1940 census enumerations for the household of Jack and Ellen Hacker in Pond Creek and Magisterial District 3 (Pond Creek).

B.J. followed the above message with the following postscript (Messenger, 8 November 2019).

The above message is from a friend. Her maiden name was Hacker so I asked her about the Baldwin farm. Turns out, her dad was born there. Small world!!

Small world indeed.

"In-law" relationships considerably vary in quality. In some legal systems, an alliance of marriage may impose legal obligations on "in-law" families. Mostly, though, "in-law" relationships are social conventions rather than legal fictions. "In-law" relationships commonly extend to a married couple's parents and siblings, and less commonly to other generations or collateral lines. Here, though, I will speak of everyone related by blood, on either side of two people related only by law, as "in-law" relatives.

What I want to show here is the manner in which local families mixed through the generations. What are the odds that the husband of N.B. Baldwin's niece-in-law would acquire title to his farm? Not especially high perhaps -- but not that small, either -- given the convolutions of family ties in a small, closely knit farming community such as could be found in many parts of rural America at the time -- such as Jackson County, Kentucky.

Age and generation

Note that B.J. Rudder, though my father's 2nd cousin and hence my 2nd cousin once removed, is younger than I am. Such reversals of generation and age occur when age gaps between siblings, and differences in age at time of marriage or family-making, conspire to produce nieces and nephews who are older than their aunts and uncles.

My mother grew up as the slightly older "sister" of her slightly younger uncle -- her mother's youngest brother in a family of 9 siblings. My grandmother, the oldest, took in and raised the youngest when their mother died. My mother and her uncle-brother, who my grandfather treated as a foster son, were classmates throughout the 12 grades of their public schooling.

Another example of family connections in contemporary Jackson County involves the grandchildren of Baldwin and Garland fence neighbors (see next).

Top  

Shared futures

Chester Baldwin and Florence McKinney

Grandkids of Baldwin-Garland fence neighbors marry

In 1920, about 15 years after the N.B. Baldwin deeds were filed, B.F. Garland's granddaughter Florence McKinney would marry John R. Baldwin's grandson Wm. Chester Baldwin.

0. Garland-Young

B.F. Garland and Nancy Ann Young
Wm. Chester Baldwin's grandparents-in-law

Benjamin Franklin "Frank" Garland (1844–1921) was born in, and grew up and died, in Clay county, Kentucky. However, he married in Jackson county, and he and his wife raised their family in Pond Creek in Jackson county.

The 1850 and 1860 censuses show Benjamin Franklin Garland living with his parents and many siblings in Manchester in Clay county. He married Nancy Ann Young on 22 August 1867 in Jackson county.

The 1870 census for Gray Hawk Post Office in Sturgeon Precinct No. 6 shows "Benjamin F. Garland" 28 [sic=23], a farmer, with "Nancy" 24, keeping house, with a daughter "Mary" 1, and a step-daughter "Eliza Dorsey" 8. Benjamin F. was born in Tennessee, and Nancy and the girls were born in Virginia.

1-year-old "Mary" on the 1870 census -- Mary "Mollie" Ann Garland -- was the future mother of Florence McKinney, who would marry William Chester "Chester" Baldwin, the 1st son of John R. and Margaret Baldwin's 4th son James Alfred Baldwin and Nancy Ann (McGee) Baldwin.

Immediately below the Benjamin F. Garland household on the 1870 census for Gray Hawk in Sturgeon Precinct No. 6 is the household of "John R. Baldwin" 41 and "Margaret" 35, with 8 children from "John M." 18 to "Henry C." 2 -- including "James A." 6 following "Newton B." 8.

The 1880 census for Pond Creek shows "Benjamin F." 36, a laborer, with his wife "Nancy A." 36, keeping house, and three children, a step-daughter "Louisa J." 17, a daughter "Mary A." 11, and a son "Hiram" 1.

The 1900 census, also for Pond Creek, shows "Frank Garland" 55, born July 1844, with his wife "Nancy E." [sic] 56, born August 1843, and 8 children ranging in ages from 29 to 11. They had been married for 32 years, and Nancy had had 11 children of whom all had survived. Among the 8 children still living with them, 3 were sons. The oldest, Hiram, 29, born Feb 1877, was teaching. The other two sons were farm laborers.

Mary was no longer living with them as she had married Henry McKinney on 14 August 1892 (see below).

The 1910 census for Pond Creek shows "Frank B. Garland" 65, with "Nancy" 66, keeping house, their daughter "Ellen" 27, and a grand son "Albert" 2. The Garlands had been married 42 years, and Nancy had given birth to 11 children of whom 11 still survived.

The 1920 census shows only "Frank Garland" 76 and "Nancy" 77 farming in Pond Creek. Both are said to have been born in Kentucky.

A death certificate shows that "Frank Garland" died in Clay county on 28 September 1921.

Nancy Ann Young was born on 23 August 1843 in Powell Valley, Claiborne, Tennessee. The 1930 census shows her living with her daughter "Lizzie" and son-in-law "Blevins Proffitt" in Pigeon Roost in Clay county. She died in Clay county on 23 July 1932.

McKinney-Garland Undated portrait reportedly showing Henry and Mollie McKinney with 4 children
Left to right tentatively Lennie, Henry, Callie (standing), Mollie holding Delia, and Florence McKinney
Delbert, the oldest child, is missing, and his first four younger sisters
seem to best represent the age range of the children in the portrait
Delia was born on 26 May 1907, so the photo dates later that year
Image copped from Ancestry.com where several people claim to have "originally" posted it
It is also posted on Henry McKinney's Find a Grave memorial

1. McKinney-Garland

Henry McKinney and Mary "Mollie" Ann Garland
Parents of Wm. Chester Baldwin's wife Florence

Mary "Mollie" Ann Garland (1869-1939) was born in Kentucky on 2 June 1869. "Mollie Garland" married "Henry McKenney" [sic] (1872-1922) in Clay county on 14 August 1892. "She died in Laurel county, Kentucky, on 5 May 1940.

The 1900 census for Magisterial District 2 (Cornett) in Clay county shows "Henry McKinney" 28, born May 1872, farming with his wife "Mollie" 30, born April 1870, and 3 children -- son "Delbert" 6, born June 1893, and daughter "Callie" 3, born Aug 1896, and daughter "Florence" 1, born Feb 1899. They have been been married 7 years, and she has had 3 children, all of whom survive in this census.

The 1910 census for Dripping Springs, Clay county shows "Henry McKinney" 37, "Molly" 40, "Delbert" 16, "Callie" 13, "Lawrence" 11, "Ada" 6, "Lennie" 5, "Delia" 3, and "Frank" 3/12 months. They have been married 18 years, and she has given birth to 7 children, all of whom survive in this census. Note that Florence, their daughter in the 1900 and 1920 censuses, has been mislisted here as a son "Laurance".

The 1920 census, also for Dripping Springs, shows "Henry McKinney" 47, "Mollie" 50, "Delbert" 23, "Florence" 20, "Ada" 16, "Lenaie" [sic=Lennie] 14, "Delia" 12, "Frank" 10, and "Vernie" 6. The couple now have 8 children. Only Callie is not listed. Henry is a farmer on a general farm, and Delbert is a laborer on a home farm -- presumably helping his father.

Henry McKinney dies on 2 September 1922 in Clay county.

The 1930 census for Fogertown, Clay county, shows "Mollie McKiney" 60 as head of household with daughter "Verni" 16 and son-in-law "Edgar Banks" 21, in a farming household neighboring "Arthur McKiney" 30 and "John McKiney" 60 farming households. John McKinney (1869–1961) is Henry's brother hence Mollie's brother-in-law. Aurthur McKinney (1895–1942) is John's son thus Mollie's nephew. "Verni" -- aka "Verna" -- is "Vernie" 6 years old, the youngest of 7 children and the youngest of 5 daughters, on the 1920 census showing "Henry McKinney" 47 and "Mollie" 50 farming on McWhorter Hill Road in Dripping Springs in Clay county. "Florence", the oldest daughter, is 20 on this census.

The 1940 census for Magisterial District 3 in Laurel county, Kentucky, shows "Mollie McKinney" 70 living as the "mother-in-law" of "George McWhorter" 51, his wife "Shaba" 45, and their 8 children, including 4 sons who are farm laborers, presumably helping their father, who is farming. The census, with a 1 April datum, was enumerated on 17 April. This Mollie -- or another Mollie -- died a month later, on 5 May 1940, in Benge in Clay county, and is buried in McKinney Cemetery in Laurel County, according to Find a Grave, which shows no headstone or other particulars.

Mollie's husband Henry McKinney is buried in the same cemetery. Find a Grave shows a headstone, and the memorial lists the following children known to have been his and Mollie's.

Delbert McKinney 1893–1967
Callie McKinney Rogers 1896–1942
Florence McKinney Baldwin 1899–1969
Ada McKinney Turner 1903–1994
Lennie McKinney Carpenter 1905–1974
Delia McKinney McWhorter 1907–1969
Frank McKinney 1910–1972
Verna McKinney Banks 1913–1974

None of these children correspond to the "Shaba McWhorter" in the 1940 census showing a "Mollie McKinney" as the mother-in-law to Shaba's husband "George McWhorter" 51. Such a daughter would have been born around 1895, between Delbert and Callie, and she would have been around 5 and 15 in 1900 and 1910, but neither of the McKinney-Garland censuses for these years shows her. "Shaba" 45 is "Shaby Barrett" 7 and "Shabie Barrett" 17 on the 1900 and 1910 censuses for Allen and Oneida, both in Clay county. So whether the "Mollie McKinney" in the 1940 McWhorter census is the former Mary "Mollie" Ann Garland is unclear.

Florence's youngest sister "Vernie" aka "Verni" was born on 1 October 1913 in Clay county, and died in Clay county on 19 August 1974. She is buried as "Verna" with her husband "Edgar" under a common "Banks" headstone in the Perry McWhorter Family Cemetery in Laurel County.

2. Baldwin-McKinney

Wm. Chester Baldwin and Florence McKinney
J.R. Baldwin and B.F. Garland grandchildren

William Chester Baldwin (1893-1971) was born on 6 February 1893 in Jackson county, Kentucky. The 1900 census shows him living in the Gray Hawk post office district of Sturgeon in Jackswon county, and the 1910 and 1920 censuses show him living in Pond Creek in Jackson county, with his parents, James Alfred Baldwin and Nancy Ann (McGee) Baldwin, and 1, 3, and 5 siblings.

Florence McKinney was born on 13 February 1899 in Clay county, and she is shown with her parents in the 1900, 1910, and 1920 censuses.

The 1930 and 1940 censuses show "Chester Baldwin" and "Florence" farming in Jefferson in Washington county in Indiana. The 1930 census states that he was 27 and she 21 when they married, which suggests that they married in 1920 after the census was taken that year. Both are said to be Kentucky-born to Kentucky-born parents. The 1940 census states that he had 10 years of education (H2) and she 7.

Florence died on 28 May 1969 and Chester died on 22 June 1971. "Wm. Chester" and "Florence" are buried under a common "Baldwin" marker in Crown Hill Cemetery, Salem, Washington County, Indiana. See Find a Grave for images.

Top  

Baldwin home Baldwin home

LeftSatellite view of former home of JA Baldwin's daughter Dorothy Ellen Mullins
on NW side of Baldwin Branch Road as it drops SW to Terrells Creek
JR Baldwin's farm was further up the road on the same side (right)
RightEllen's home NW of road (lower left) and former NB Baldwin home SE of road (middle)
The NB Baldwin home is about 600 meters (0.4 miles) down from the junction (to SW)
The Mullins home is a further 700 meters (0.5 miles miles) down the road (to SW)
JR Baldwin's farm was somewhere (?) between but nearer the Mullins home and on its side
20 March 2021 Screen captures from Google Maps

Mullins home on Baldwin Branch Rd

Home of Dorothy Ellen (Baldwin) Mullins
Posted 18 November 2018 by BJ Baldwin
Home is left (SE) off road heading SW
JR Baldwin's farm was just past it
on same side (left, SE) of road

Lois reported that her mother recalled when this house was built by Ellen's husband Rovie Mullins, probably in the 1930s. BJ reported that she'd been told JR Baldwin's farm had been nearby, and that JA Baldwin had received some of his father's land and passed in on to his daughter Ellen.

Baldwin home
Baldwin home Baldwin home

LeftSatellite view of former N.B. Baldwin home on SE side of Baldwin Branch Road
RightWider view showing N.B. Baldwin home (lower left) and Jnct w/John Cast Rd (upper right)
The home is about 600 meters (0.4 miles) down Baldwin Branch Road from its junction with John Cast Road
The Mullins home is a further 700 meters (0.5 miles miles) down the road a bit beyond JR Baldwin's farm
Screen captures from Google Maps

Baldwin home

Dashboard view of Sadie's "Our old home in Kentucky" driving SW into sunset
down Baldwin Branch Rd from junction with John Cast Rd toward Terrells Creek
Cropped from video by B.J. Baldwin Rudder
Baldwin Genealogy Group, December 2018

Baldwin home

Click on image to enlarge
AboveSadie's "Our old home in Kentucky" in December 2018
Photograph by Lois McWhorter from Baldwin Genealogy Group (see her comments left)
Note direction of shadows in photo of home shot from road

Former NB Baldwin home on Baldwin Branch Rd

BelowSadie's "Our old home in Kentucky" circa 1880s-1890s
Scan of photograph in Wetherall Family Collection
The roofing in the middle of the present home seems more recent,
presumably the result of replacing the central chimney with the smaller chimney
between the windows on the porch to the right of the stack of wood

Click on image to enlarge

Baldwin home

"Our old home in Kentucky"

"Our old Kentucky home" is pencilled on the back in what I now take to be the hand of Sadie Baldwin. At one time I thought it might be the hand of her mother Ellen Baldwin, the wife of N.B. Baldwin, nee Martha Ellen Steele.

The photograph is in the Wetherall Family Collection, and it was probably given to my father by Sadie or her daughter Faye Rubenstorf. My father was partly raised by Ellen when a child in the 1910s, and he lived with the family of her 3rd daughter Meda Ure, while going to college in the 1930s. Both Sadie and Ellen, who lived with Sadie, lived nearby. Ellen died in 1943 and I was born in 1941. I believe I met her but have no memory of her. Sadie I knew when growing up, and knew Faye and her family much longer.

Where

In 2010, the last time I was able to discuss my father's family photographs with him, he couldn't identify the home. He'd never been to Kentucky. He thought the writing might be Sadie's or Ellens. If Sadie's, it would be her Baldwin-Steele home. If Ellen's, it might have been her natal Steele-Grubb home. Some descendants of the Baldwin-Howard family still living in the vicinity of Annville in Jackson County, in the Baldwin-McGee line, identified the home as one which once belonged to N.B. Baldwin (see above and left).

When and who

The "when" and "who" are speculative. If the home was built shortly after N.B. Baldwin and Ellen Steele married in 1881 -- and if the photograph was taken between late 1883 and early 1887, before Ellen's mother Elizabeth Steele died in 1888 -- then the figures might be Elizabeth and N.B.'s mother Margaret Baldwin with a Baldwin-Steele granddaughter (see left).

Baldwin home Baldwin home
Baldwin home
Baldwin home Click on image to enlarge
Another photograph of Baldwin and/or Steele home in Kentucky
Found with "Our old home in Kentucky" photo (above) and "Dear Aunt" postcard (below)
Wetherall Family Collection
Notice the chimney in the middle and the break in the roof,
suggesting that the original building was expanded
by adding a wing of symmetrical design
Baldwin home

Dear Aunt:-
  you will no doubt recognize the picture. I wish you a merry Christmas. I hope all is well with you.
    Yours
      Mart

The postcard mailed from Bowling Green, Kentucky, on 23 December 1913, to Ellen (Steele) Baldwin in St. Maries, Idaho, where N.B. Baldwin was running a boarding house and restaurant. My father, then 2-1/2, was living with them. The sender, Martin Wesley Steele (1876-1945), was the son of George Conrad Steele (1846-1909), Ellen's older brother. Martin became a physician, and his son, Starr Emery Steele (1901-1988), became an optomitrist.

Wetherall Family Collection

Baldwin home

Baldwin-Steele homes

One of the more interesting quests for me, in reconstructing the life of my father's Baldwin-Steele family in Kentucky, has been to determine where the Baldwin-Steele family lived, and then virtually visit homes that may still be there and imagine places no longer there. The quest began with several photographs of houses, and correspondence with comments about houses and farms, among my father's Baldwin-Steele detritus. One of the photographs showed a small house through an open gate and 2 women, one holding an infant child, standing near the porch. Penciled on the back were the words "Our old home in Kentucky".

Correspondence and a letter to my father from Sadie Williams, the oldest of Baldwin-Steele sister, related to a trip she made to Kentucky from Idaho in 1947, referred to "the old home place" (postcard), and "our old home place" and "my dads home place" and "grandpa Baldwins farm" (letter). I concluded (after thinking otherwise) that the writing on the back of the photograph is Sadie's. But I have a feeling the photograph was taken long before the trip, and was either among her mother's things, or possibly one given her by a relative during her 1947 visit.

"Our old home" correspondence

Several pieces of corrspondence relating to the trip -- 4 postcards and 1 letter, from Sadie to my father, her nephew -- survive.

Sadie's "old home place" postcard (1947)

The 4 postcards were postmarked during September 1947 -- 2 in Des Moines, Iowa, on 10 September 1947, and 2 in Annville, Jackson County, Kentucky, on 22 September 1947. Sadie's childhood home -- the home of her parents, Newton Bascom Baldwin and Martha Ellen Steele -- was located, and still stands, on a road that is now within the catchment of Annville. Pond Creek, which flows southwest through the southern part of the town, is the namesake of the census area, south of the town, where John and Margaret Baldwin and several of their grown children had settled by the 1900 census -- probably by the lost 1890 census. The family appears to have migrated to Jackson County from Lee County in Virginia in 1863, during the Civil War (see .

One of the postcards sent from Annville on 21 September 1947 had the following message (see Sadie's old Kentucky home: Uncle Clay's southern hospital, above, for images and other details).

Just seen a chicken die and Uncle Clay is in the sweet potato patch which means fried chicken and sweet potatoes for dinner with the usual hot biscuts. I came to uncle's three days ago and two chickens have died. I don't want a fuss made over me but the southern hospitality of my childhood hasn't changed. I know I won't have time to see all that I want to see. Haven't seen the old home place yet but will do that this week.

Uncle Clay is Sadie's father's younger brother Henry Clay Baldwin (1867-1950). He and his wife Linda would die 3 years after Sadie's visit. They appear to have still been living in the same Pond Creek area where they had settled by 1900. See 10.11 Henry Clay Baldwin and Malinda Abrams (below) for a detailed look at their lives.

Sadie's "old home place" letter (1947)

Some later, in another stash of my father's belongings, I found an 8-page letter from Sadie to my father, in an envelope postmarked 9 October 1947 in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, where Sadie had lived for many years, near her daughter Faye and niece Marilyn. In the letter, written a couple of weeks after she returned to Idaho, Sadie narrated her trip to Kentucky in a more nostalgic tone, noting changes in the means of transportation and road conditions, and reflecting on her appearance and age and awareness that, while still full of vigor, she will soon be gone.

In the letter, Sadie describes her father's (NB Baldwin's) home place and her grandfather's (JR Baldwin's) farm as follows (pages 4-6, underescoring Sadie's, [bracketed] remarks mine). See Sadie's letter (above) for images of all pages.

[ First pages omitted ] . . . I had a nice and interesting time in Ky. Many changes, some good. Wonderful roads as far as they went, but places off the highway were harder to reach than when I lived there since people use horses for riding very little any more and in many places cars can't get thru. I went to our old home place in a car but it's still a mystery how we got there. All of grandpa Baldwins farm had run down terribly which was depressing and pappas my dads home place was the same but in many more places there were great improvements. Everyone seems to be living well tho.

One aunt that I visited I had to go in a jeep and one I had to walk two miles[.] Some who seemed to have had the greatest opportunity for improvement ware were worse than ever.

Saw old school mates and one of my teachers who is still teaching. That was one thing that made me feel younger. When I looked at people my own age I felt old until I looked at my face in a mirror and saw this chipper old lady from Idaho. Everyone remarked about how young I looked. . . . [ last pages omitted ]

Whether Sadie means that her dad's place was "the same as it was when she left" or was "run down the same as her grandfather's farm" is not clear. I'm inclined to think the former -- i.e., grandpa's place was run down, pappa's place was the same, some other places were improved.

Sadie's reference to "aunts" is odd. All her few and most likely not very close Baldwin-Howard and Steele-Grubb aunts were long gone. Only 2 uncles were still alive at the time -- James A. Baldwin and Henry Clay Baldwin. Both had been close to her father, and both still lived in the Annville area in 1947. In her correspondence to my father, however, she mentioned only "Uncle Clay", whose wife, Malinda, was still alive. Sadie must also have visited "Uncle Jim" (if this was how she knew him), though Nancy had died the year before. Perhaps she was referring to "cousins" -- many of whom, on both sides of the family, were still in Jackson County.

Top  


Identities of homes and people

My father's Baldwin detritus included the black-and-white photographs of the homes shown to the right. I posted them on the Baldwin Genealogy Group page on Facebook -- first on 29 November 2018, then again on 15 December 2018. The following exhanges ensued concerning the photograph of the house and the 2 women, one holding a child.


Baldwin Genealogy exchanges

The cousins who discussed Sadie's "Our old home in Kentucky" photograph in the Baldwin genealogy Group -- and their Baldwin-Howard lines -- are as follows.

0. Baldwin-Howard
   John R. ___ Margaret
   Baldwin  |  Howard
      ______|____ 
     |           |
1. Newton      James       Nancy
   Bascum      Alfred _____Ann
   Baldwin     Baldwin  |  McGee
     |             _____|_________________
     |            |           |           |
2. Ida          Roy         Walter      Dorothy
   Mae          Eldon       Raleigh     Ellen
   (Baldwin)    Baldwin     Baldwin     (Baldwin)
   Wetherall    (Oma)       (Edith)     Mullins
     |            |           |         
3. William B.   Hazel       B.J.
   Wetherall    (Baldwin)   (Baldwin)
     |          Gill        Rudder 
     |            |           | 
4. William O.   Lois        Ross
   Wetherall    McWhorter   Murray
  1. Dramatis persona
  2. The discussants are related as follows.
  3. I am William O. Wetherall.
    Lois McWhorter and Ross Murray are my 3rd cousins.
    However, they are 2nd cousins to each other.
  4. Lois's mother Hazel and BJ Rudder are 1st cousins.
    So Lois and BJ are 1st cousins once removed.
  5. Hazel and BJ are my father's 2nd cousins.
    So they are my 2nd cousins once removed.
  6. Ellen Mullins and her brothers Roy and Walter were
    my grandmother Ida (Baldwin) Wetherall's 1st cousins.
    They were also 1st cousins of Ida's sister Sadie (Baldwin) Williams, my father's aunt.
    They were thus my father's 1st cousins once removed.
    And as such they were my 1st cousins twice removed.
  7. All these relationships are predicated on our common Baldwin-Howard ancestry and the branchings of our collateral lines.

Baldwin Genealogy Group
15/16 December 2018

Lois McWhorter Bill Wetherall look at this pic [color photo to right]. Mom [Hazel (Baldwin) Gill] said her parents [Roy and Oma (Shepherd) Baldwin] moved into this house in 1936. NB [Newton Bascum Baldwin] lived in this house before them. Could this be the same house in your pic?

Lois posted the color photograph shown to the right above the black-and-white photo of the house with two women and a child in front. The color photo and related stories became the keys to the identification of the house.

BJ Baldwin Rudder Lois McWhorter if your mom knows that he lived there, I bet it's the same house.

Lois McWhorter BJ Baldwin Rudder mom also said NB had a daughter, Sally [Sarah (Sada, Sadie) (Baldwin) Williams], who had a child buried in a cementary in the "holler" at the old Steve Gabbard place.

BJ Baldwin Rudder Lois McWhorter where is the Steve Gabbard place?

BJ Baldwin Rudder We need to video your mom telling all this history.

Lois McWhorter BJ Baldwin Rudder do you know where the new brick house is located about half a mile from Ellen's house? Actually, it was known as the old Sarah (Sarie) Gabbard place.

Bill Wetherall Fascinating, Lois. This is how the dots get connected. House (sans chimney) looks just like the one in my photo. The lay of the land -- the gentle downward sloping off to the right -- is similar.

BJ Baldwin Rudder Lois McWhorter was that John Gabbard's place?

Lois McWhorter BJ Baldwin Rudder I think so

Bill Wetherall Lois, your mother's story about NB having a daughter "Sally" -- and of Sally having a child buried on the grounds of the "old Sarah Gabbard place" aka the former NB Baldwin home -- helps solve a mystery surrounding NB's oldest daughter Sada (Sadie) Baldwin Williams.

"aka the former NB Baldwin home"
I mistakenly equated "the old Sarah Gabbard place" with NB Baldwin's former home. I did not yet understand that Ellen referred to a sister of Roy and Walter, though BJ had posted an image of Ellen's home (see right) and a drive-by video.

BJ Baldwin Rudder Bill Wetherall I think this is the house. It's located just up from where JR lived. His grandson lived there which is my Uncle Roy.

Ross Murray I agree that this is likely the same house.

"buried in a cemetery in the 'holler' at the old Steve Gabbard place"
"Holler" is an Appalachian variety of "hollow" -- a small valley in a stretch of land. I can find several Gabbards in the Pond Creek area of Jackson County. But I am unable to sort them out in relation to Baldwin Branch Road, or socially link them with the namesake Baldwin-Howard family.

The above Baldwin Genealogy exchange locates "the old Sarah (Sarie) Gabbard place . . . about half a mile from Ellen's house". If this means "up" (NE) what came to be called Baldwin Branch Road from Ellen's house, then I get the impression that the Gabbard place was either near or on former Baldwin-Howard property. The Gabbards may have been fence neighbors with John and Margaret Baldwin. Or perhaps they acquired a part of the Baldwin-Howard property that came with a grave a two.

Many cemeteries today have their origins in family plots on farms or on peripheral land shared by neighboring farms. As property changed hands, and as larger parcels were broken up and smaller parcels consolidated, countless graves have been lost to grass, overgrowth, and shifted fence lines.

Top  


Who remembers what, and why?

It is too late to ask my father, who appears to have had no contact with any of his mother's Baldwin or Steele relatives in Kentucky, if he recalls any stories about Sadie's early life or marriage. My father was 3-days shy of 8 when his grandfather N.B. Baldwin died in 1919. But he was 32 and still in close touch with his Steele grandmother Ellen Baldwin when she passed away in 1943.

What, if anything, did my father hear from Ellen? Or from his Baldwin-Steele aunts, including Sadie? Or from Sadie's daughter Faye, who remained his closest cousin? Possibly nothing. Possibly a lot. He volunteered, and repeated, only the "Uncle Charley stories" he'd tell at the dinner table, about the summers he worked on his uncle-in-law Charley Anstine's farm in Nebraska, not only to impress on his children the value of hard work, but to explain his own penchant for growing vegetables in our back yard.

If, in fact, my father had heard something, that fact itself -- the fact that he remembered hearing something -- would have been more valuable than what he recalled hearing, which probably would have been altered by the inevitable warp of filtered and embellished memory and hearsay.

In this sense, the story that Lois McWhorter has relayed from her mother -- Hazel Gill's recolletion of NB Baldwin having a daughter named Sally, who's child is buried in a cemetery at the at the old Gabbard place -- is priceless for what it reveals about the nature of "family memory" -- how incidents are remembered -- who remembers them, and why.

Hazel (Baldwin) Gill and Sadie (Baldwin) Williams

Hazel Baldwin is relating a story she may have heard from anyone in her line of descent or from a collateral relative, if not from someone else. Her daughter Lois is sharing the story with cousins, who may pass it along however they remember it. I myself am doing that here. What you have read here is not what Hazel was told, or what she remembers she heard, or what she said to Lois, or even what Lois wrote -- but what I am saying Lois wrote that Hazel said she had heard.

The story has a long chain of custody, as it were, during which the details can easily change. It was probably 2nd or 3rd hand by the time Hazel heard it.

N.B. and Sadie appear to have left Kentucky around 1904, and the entire Baldwin-Steele family was in Knoxville, Iowa in 1906 -- the year Hazel's father, Roy Baldwin, was born. Hazel was born in 1928 -- a quarter of a century after Sadie's lost children appear to have born -- over 20 years after the N.B. Baldwin's family left Kentucky -- and about 9 years after N.B. Baldwin passed away.

Hazel was 18 in the summer of 1947 when Sadie visited Kentucky. James A. Baldwin, Sadie's uncle, who by all accounts was N.B. Baldwin's closest brother, was still alive, as was Roy Baldwin, Sadie's 1st cousin, who was born after she left and presumably she had never met.

I have no idea whether N.B. or Ellen ever set foot in Kentucky again after leaving. I am inclined to think that, if either visited Kentucky again, it was Ellen, during one of her several visits to her 2nd daughter's (Lydia's) home in Nebraska. Those trips ended shortly after Lydia death in 1929. And Ellen died in 1943.

Nor do I know if Sadie set foot in Kentucky again until her 1947 visit. My impression is that she didn't.

Sadie mentioned only "Uncle Clay" in her 1947 correspondence to my father. But I suspect that Sadie also saw not only her uncle James A. Baldwin, but met for the first time his younger children, Roy, Walter, and Ellen, and probably also their children, at some sort of reunion event. That would have been the usual scenario.

Sadie most likely also visited the Baldwin-Howard graves and probably also the grave of Elizabeth Steele, her Steele-Grubb grandmother. Elizabeth died in 1888 when Sadie was 5 but is buried in the same Wilson Cemetery in Moores Creek as were John and Margaret Baldwin, and for that matter also Arch and Martha Baldwin.

The Baldwins and Steeles were neighbors, and Elizabeth had was left a widow 5 years after the birth of Ellen, her youngest child, in 1863. N.B. and Ellen married in 1880, and Elizabeth probably lived the last years of her life with her daughter Ellen and son-in-law N.B. Baldwin -- possibly at the home in the photograph.

It is tempting to imagine that the two women in the photograph are Elizabeth Steele and Ellen Baldwin -- grandmothers of an infant Baldwin-Steele granddaughter -- the Sadie born in 1883 or Lydia born in 1886. Elizabeth died in April 1888 and Meda, the 3rd Baldwin sister, was born in December 1888. My paternal grandmother Ida, the 4th, was born in 1890. Margaret died in 1912.

Sadie was obviously in the vicinity of both the N.B. Baldwin home that still exists, and her grandfather's farm, which is run down. The Gabbard place appears to be in the same area. Presumably, the cemetery in the hollow was still there. Would Sadie not have visited it? Could Hazel not have heard of the burial story at the time of Sadie's visit in 1947 -- and 70 years later convey what she remembered of the story to her daughter Lois?

Roy and Oma Baldwin's timeline

How does Hazel's report that her parents, Roy and Oma Baldwin, moved into the N.B. Baldwin home in 1936, compare with census records?

The 1930 census for Pond Creek District 3 shows "Roy Baldwin" 21 farming with his wife "Oma" 20, with their daughter "Hazel" 1-3/12. Roy and Oma were respectively 19 and 18 when they married and they owned their home.

The 1940 census for Magisterial District 3, Jackson County, shows "Roy Baldwin" 30 farming with his wife "Oma" 28, and their daughters "Hazel" 11 and "Doris" 5. The census also states that Roy and Oma had completed 8 years of schooling and owned their home. And it says they were living in the same house as of 1 April 1935.

The education question was new to the census.
The purpose of the 1935-residence question was to measure the mobility of America's population during the 1930s.

"Pond Creek" and "Magisterial District 3" are essentially synonomous on Jackson County censuses. Roy and Oma's neighbors on the 1930 and 1940 census sheets are different -- which suggests, but does not prove, that they or their neighbors moved sometime between 1930 and 1935. Only a search of deeds and other county records could determine exactly where in the district they were living at the time of the censuses and when they moved. It is also possible that Roy and Oma moved to the place in 1936 but felt that was close enough to 1935 to just say they were living there then.

Hazel Maxie Baldwin was born on 14 December 1928. She married Charles Gill (1928-2016) and they had three children -- Lois McWhorter of London in Laurel county, and Steve Gill and Russell Gill, both of Annville in Jackson County. Charles, born on 5 August 1928 in Laurel County, passed away on 2 October 2016 in Richmond, the seat of Madison County. He is buried in Medlock Cemetery in Annville, where Hazel resides at the time of this writing (2021). Lois, a straight-up 3rd cousin, is a professor of business administration at the University of the Cumberlands. She is also a member of the Baldwin Genealogy Group.

Doris Baldwin was born on 1 January 1931. She passed away in McKee, the seat of Jackson County, Kentucky, on 20 October 2013.


Sadie's movements

Sadie, the oldest of Newton Bascum Baldwin's and Martha Ellen Steele's 4 daughters, is better represented in my father's photographs than anyone else in the Baldwin-Steele family. At the same time, she has been the most difficult of the sisters to trace in terms of her marriage or marriages.

The possibility that Sadie left the graves of a child or two in Kentucky when leaving with her husband, parents, and siblings in the early 1900s is supported by the 1910 census, which implies that she had lost 2 children.

The 1900 census for Pond Creek in Jackson County shows what looks most like "Sally" (17) [Sarah, Sadie, Sada] living in Kentucky as the oldest daughter of N.B. Baldwin (38). She was born in Kentucky, and was single and at school.

18 October 1902 "Sallie Baldwin" married "A.P. Williams" in Jackson County, Kentucky.

1 March 1905 Kansas census records "Sallie" (22) with C.F. Williams (28) and a son Oscar (6), plus N.B. Baldwin (44). Oscar appears to be C.F. (A.P.) Williams's son by an earlier marriage.

4 October 1906 Sadie's 1st confirmed (documented) child, Faye, was born in Knoxville, Iowa. Her delayed birth certificate father was "Ambrose Powell Williams".

28 November 1907 Sadie's 2nd confirmed child, Claude, was born in Lincoln, Nebraska. His birth cerficate father was "Chas F. Williams".

The 1910 census shows Sadie Williams with Faye and Claude living with NB and Ellen Baldwin and Meda, the 3rd Baldwin sister, still single, in St. Maries, Idaho. The census stated that Sadie was married, had been married for 6 years, and had had 4 children of whom 2 survived. I have no information about "Oscar" after the 1905 Kansas census, and A.P. and/or C.F. Williams also vanish from my radar after 1907.

Sadie's 1900, 1905, and 1910 census profiles generally favor the record of her marriage in 1902. The 1910 census supports Hazel (Baldwin) Gill's recollection that a child of N.B. Baldwin's daughter Sally was buried on nearby Gabbard property. But when Sadie lost 2 children -- possibly twins -- is not clear. And the circumstances that led N.B. and Ellen Baldwin to leave Kentucky around 1904, with a married daughter and her husband, and three younger daughters, remains shrouded in mystery.


Leaving the dead behind

Leaving Kentucky for the west -- a long journey by train and wagon -- meant leaving living parents and siblings behind. In Sadie's case, it also meant leaving deceased children behind.

The deceased were quickly interred, and news of a death in the family out west or back home might not arrive until long after the funeral and burial. Separated by thousands of miles, without the communication and transportation facilities that are taken for granted today, meant grieving from a distance. Families separated by migration were likely to never see each other again, even at a graveyard.

Even today -- with the ability to inform someone on the other side of the world of a death within minutes, and the ability to be practically anywhere in the world within a day -- mourning and memorializing at a distance is a common experience. The scattering of the remains of family members somewhere -- in lieu of interring in a family cemetery or depositing in a columbarium -- is the price of individual mobility and family scattering.

The single consolation is the ability, today, to create "virtual" family cemeteries in the form of Internet links to related people. As a trade-off for less physical proximity, we can travel to the graves of ancestors we might not have heard of in past, and could not afford to visit today.


"Our old home in Kentucky" photograph

Identities of women and child

On 15 December 2018 I posted the following message to the Baldwin Genealogy Group.

I have struck out and modified my impressions of "The old home in Kentucky" photograph.

Bill Wetherall
December 15, 2018
I am reposting the photograph of "Our old home in Kentucky" as it was identified on the back in pencil, as well as an image of the back showing the received penciled description and my recent "WW" notes. I reported that I thought the hand to be that of either Martha Ellen (Steele) Baldwin, the wife of Newton Bascum Baldwin -- or Sadie Elizabeth Baldwin, their oldest daughter. I have samples of the writing of all members of the family except N.B. Baldwin. And I have determined that the description was written by Ellen on account of a 1930 sample of her writing in a note she sent to my father, William Bascom Wetherall. The sample on the back of the photograph is very short. There are two comparable initial or final letters -- initial "o" and final "y" -- but only one comparable word -- "in" -- but the "in" resemblance clinches the identity for me Sadie on account of a long letter she wrote that includes the phrase "our old home place" as well as many examples of "in".

The "our" in Ellen's Sadie's characterization of the home must mean the Baldwin-Steele home that she made with Bascum her parents, N.B. Baldwin and Ellen Steele, made in Kentucky. She and Bascum N.B. and Ellen were children in neighboring Baldwin and Steele households, listed in succession immediately after John R. Baldwin's household, all living in different dwellings, in the 1880 census. They were married in 1881 and left Pond Creek around 1904-1905. Their four daughters were born in 1883 (Sadie), 1886 (Lydia), 1888 (Meda), and 1890 (my paternal grandmother Ida). The Baldwin-Steeles were neighbors of John R. Baldwin and George F. Baldwin in the 1900 census.

Whether Bascom and Ellen built the home or bought or otherwise acquired it is speculative. If they built it, then it was probably built sometime during the 1880s and 1890s.

FIGURES IN PHOTOGRAPH
I am also now inclined to agree with Ross Murray's opinion that the two adults in the photo are both women -- whereas I had originally thought that the figure to the left holding the baby might be a man. The images are too fuzzy for me to say anything about their age -- though the figure to the right looks older. The child appears to be only a few months old.

Whether the photograph was taken before or after the Baldwin-Steele family left in 1904-1905 is up in the air. If before, then assuming the child is a Baldwin-Steele girl, the photograph would date shortly after the birth of Sadie (1883), Lydia (1886), 1888 (Meda), or 1890 (Ida). Ellen's mother, Elizabeth (Grubb) Steele, was a widow in the 1880 census. She very likely continued to live with her daughter Ellen when Ellen married Bascum in 1881. It is even possible that Bascum moved into the Steele home, which by 1880 consisted of only Ellen's older brother (22) in addition to Elizabeth (59) and Ellen (15). Elizabeth died in 1888 before Meda was born. So if the (older) person to the right is Elizabeth, then the (younger) person to the left could be Ellen Steele or even Margaret Baldwin holding Lydia (1886) or Sadie (1883). This would date the photograph either 1883-1884 or 1886. Or the photo was taken after 1904-1905 of whoever was living in house after the Baldwin-Steele family left and before the mid 1930s when Roy and Oma Baldwin moved to the home, which may have passed to James A. Baldwin after Margaret Baldwin's death in 1912.

[ Rest of posting omitted ]

Ross Murray on N.B. Baldwin home

Ross Murray's assessment of the home, and of the people standing in front of the porch, were very useful.

Ross Murray I believe these are 2 women. Also cedar shakes and very smooth cut stone for the chimney. The chimney in the center of the house like that is unusual. Fancy window sachs.

Significantly, the remodeled version of the home, which still stands, clearly shows the relocation of the chimney from the center of the roof to the outside wall on the right side of the porch.

Ross Murray on Steele postcard home

Ross's comments on the other home -- shown on a postcard to Ellen Baldwin in St. Maries, Idaho, from a Steele nephew in Bowling Green, Kentucky -- were also very useful. The postcard was sent in 1913, a year after Margaret Baldwin's death, and roughly 8 years after N.B. and Ellen Baldwin had left Kentucky.

Ross Murray This building is quite large. Larger than most any house I've seen around here, but you can tell from the cedar shakes on the roof that this a very old photograph. The fireplace is constructed out of very smooth stones, but they are so variable that I feel they were cut stone and not concrete.

Note that this house, too, has a chimney in the center. But note also the roof, which appears to have a break in the middle.

Was only half of the original roof repaired or replaced? Or was the original building, half this size and with a chimney on an outside wall, expanded by adding an identical wing of symmetrical design, leaving the chimney in the middle of the house, and the contrasting roofs?

Top  

Maps, politics, geography

Maps are mirrors of geopolitical history. They show, for the time and place they represent, the territorial facts or claims of those who commissioned their drawing. Some boundaries represent contemporary agreements between those who broker why and how a border is drawn. An international treaty may stipulate that the border be in a certain place and other agreements may determine the conditions under which people may cross the border.

But a country might draw a border to mark a territory it claims, that another country also claims and may actually occupy. The territorial conflict probably stirs strong nationalistic emotions that could trigger a war.

The history of the United States is unexceptional in that, like the histories of other modern states, it is a history of aggressive territorial agrandizement involving many legal confrontations and physical skirmishes, battles, and even wars between contestants on either side of a contested border. In the United States, the "victors" were for the most part the Europeans who came to the Americas and their descendants, who founded the United States and proceded to expand its boundaries to the Pacific as though the continent was rightfully theirs for the taking.

And once taken, there is no returning. The "War of the Rebellion" -- later stylized the "Civil War" was a territorial conflict engendered by a contested secession of slavist states. The secession of the states that formed the Confederacy -- not their practice of slavery -- provoked what was essention a war to bring the rebel states back into the Union fold. The emancipation proclamation was an afterthought.

Baldwin-Howard family began with the marriage around 1848 between John R. Baldwin and Rebecca Howard, and the birth in 1849 of the first of their 3 children, Elizabeth Letitia Baldwin. John R. Baldwin's marriage with Rececca's sister Margaret in June 1855, barely 11 weeks after Rebecca's death in April, and produced 12 or 13 more children, the last of whom, Charles Nelson Baldwin, was born in 1879. This writer, born in 1941, is a 4th generation descendant of John and Margaret, through their 4th child, Newton Bascum Baldwin, born in 1862. My paternal grandmother, Ida Mae Baldwin, was born around 1890, and my father, William Bascom Wetherall, was born in 1911. My daughter and granddaughter, born in 1978 and 2014, represent the 5th and 6th generations. I know of at least one 7th generation descendant in a collateral line, and there are probably a few 8th generation descendants somewhere waiting to be found in expanding SNS genealogy network.

To round off a bit -- figure 25 years per 6 generations over the 150 years from 1850 to 2000. Then take that back 6 generations to 1700. The Baldwin-Howard family began from two people, each of which was the descendent of 2 parents (1st generation back), 4 grandparents (2nd generation back), 8 great grandparents (3rd generation), 16 great-great grandparents (4th), 32 great-great-great grandparents (5th), then 64 great-great-great-great grandparents (6th) -- which totals 126 -- or (2^(g+1)-2 = (2^(6+1)-2) -- each. In other words, John R. Baldwin and his Howard sister wives stood on the shoulders of 126 ancestors each and 252 ancestors between them going back to 1700 -- including 64 ancestors each and 128 ancestors between them in the 1700 generation alone.

At this point, there is only fragmentary information about the progenitors of the Baldwin and Howard families. There are many Baldwin and Howard families, and as names go, the "Baldwin" of John. R. Baldwin, and the "Howard" of Rebecca and Margaret Howard, are just two among tens, hundreds, and thousands of individuals families that -- over the centuries contributed genes to what became the start of the "Baldwin-Howard" family in 1848. The fixation 170 years later today on "Baldwin-Howard" is an artifact of the way that cousins in collateral lines have bonded around the sharing of a common Baldwin-Howard ancestry -- which the utter uniqueness of which is totally commonplace.

The following maps show some of the place names that figure in the social history of the Baldwin-Howard family, which began in Virginia but settled in Kentucky, then branched to other states, including Idaho, which became the home of the families of two of the Baldwin-Howard siblings, William Henley Baldwin and Newton Bascum Baldwin.

Virginia and Kentucky Forthcoming
Idaho Territory and Idaho
Indian Territory and Oklahoma


Idaho maps
Idaho maps Image copped and cropped from Google Maps Idaho maps

Idaho Territory and Idaho

Baldwin-Howard families in the panhandle

As a descendant in the Baldwin-Steele line of the Baldwin-Howard families of Virginia and Kentucky, which settled in Idaho, after migrating from Kentucky through Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska, and Washington, I naturally grew up with a understanding of Idaho and California geography. I heard nothing about Kentucky or Kansas, and very little about even Iowa and Nebraska, when growing up, though Washington, and to some extent Oregon, figure in family lore.

The purpose of documenting all all the above details concerning the Baldwin-Robbins line, and descdendant Mary Elizabeth (Baldwin) Collins and Ada Violet (Collins) Griner lines, is to dramatize the extent to which relatives on both my father's and mother's sides shared communal space in the Clearwater River the Nez Perce Reservation areas, and peripheral towns, in the northern panhandle of Idaho -- from places like Stites and Kooskia in Idaho County in the south to Peck and Lewiston in Nez Perce County in the middle, and St. Maries and Coeur d'Alene in Bennewah and Kootenai counties to the north..and St. Maries, where N. Bascum Baldwin's family and several descendants settled. My mother was born and grew up in the same general area of the Clearwater River includes Stites and Kooskia, and my father was a clerk for the Ninth District Court.

Idaho crossroads

The following facts dramatize the extent to which the immediate ancestors of my Wetherall-Hardman family shared the same terrain during the first half of the 20th century. Also noted below are some of local crossroads involving Haruo Aoki, the linguist most responsible for studying and describing the Nez Perce language, who taught me Japanese at Berkeley.

Baldwin-Howard family crossroads

  1. William Henley and Nancy Jane Baldwin homesteaded in Stites Idaho about 1905.
  2. Newton Bascum and Martha Ellen Baldwin settled in St. Maries around 1909.
  3. William B. Wetherall was partly raised by his maternal grandparents N.B. and M.E. in St. Maries between 1911 and 1907.
  4. William B. Wetherall resided with the family of his maternal aunt, Meda Jane (Baldwin) Ure and and her family, which then included Ellen (Steele) Baldwin, while going to college and law school in Moscow from about 1930 to 1937in St. Maries while going to college in Moscow
    Other Baldwin-Steele descendants settled in Couer D'Alene and a 3rd cousin of mine still resides there
    My mother's families homesteaded in Peck area (near Orofino) -- between Stites and St. Maries
    Peck High School teams played with Kooskia High School teams when she was in school
    My father met my mother in Lewiston, and her Peck parents met Ellen Baldwin and Meda Ure
    My mother's family, including my maternal grandmother and aunt, also became acquainted with Meda's older sister Sadie (Baldwin) Williams and her daughter Faye (Williams) (Mathews) (Nelson) Rebenstorf in St. Maries

To be continued.

Top  


Indian territory States and territories of the United States circa 1812-1816
Louisiana Territory was established in 1805 within the Louisiana Purchase of 1803
When Louisiana became a state in 1812, the rest of Louisiana Territory was renamed Missouri Territory
Missouri Territory was broken up into other territories when Missouri became a state in 1821
Image by Golbez copped from Missouri Territory (Wikipedia)
Indian territory Migrations set in motion by Indian Removal Act of 1833
Arkansas Territory, created in 1819, became the State of Arkansas 1836
Florida Territory, created in 1822, became the State of Florida in 1845
Copped from Indian Removal Act (National Geographic)
Indian territory Indian Territory in relation to Oklahoma Territory before the territories became Oklahoma in 1907
Note that Indian Territory includes 5 tribes -- Cherokee, Muscogee (Creek), Choctaw, and Chickasaw
These tribes were represented on the seal proposed for the would-be State of Sequoyah (see below)
Image by Kmusser copped from Indian Territory (Wikipedia)
Indian territory

AboveIndian Territory conceived as State of Sequoyah at Sequoyah Statehood Convention in 1905
Copped and downsized image based on scan in Oklahoma State University Library Digital Collections
Below   Northeast counties proposed for Sequoyah left versus Oklahoma counties right
Note on the Sequoyah map the placenames Kansas, Saline, and Tahlequah,
which appear on several Baldwin-Robbins and Collins-Baldwin records

Note also Delaware County's shared border with Missouri and Arkansas

Click on image and zoom to enlarge Indian territory Indian territory

Indian Territory and Oklahoma

Cherokee land and Cherokee censuses

The Indian Removal Act, passed by Congress on 28 March 1833, forced several Indian nations to leave their ancestral lands in southeastern states and territories and settle in what was called Indian Territory to the west of Arkansas Territory and south of an unorganized territory that became Kansas Territory in 1854. Arkansas Territory became the state of Arkansas in 1836. The removal of the Cherokee, the largest of the nations that were forced to relocate, took place in 1838 and 1839, along what came to called -- and memorialized today as -- the Trail of Tears. The trail terminated in the area of Tahlequah, how the seat of Cherokee County.

"Indian Territory" was defined and redefined by several political developments during the 18th and 19th centuries as white populations multiplied and coveted Indian homelands. Pressume on Indian homelands vastly increased after founding in 1776 of the United States of America on principles of white superiority and Christian manifest destiny. The white-Christian virus spread west with a vengeance for territorial organization and statehood.

By 1803, there were federal mechanisms for Indian tribes in regions that had already been incorporated as states or territories, to obtain land grants in less unorganized territories in exchange for title to the land they occupied in states or in territories slated to become states. By the 1830s, the political mood had shifted to forcing Indian nations to relocate from coveted lands in southeastern states and territories. The 1833 Indian Removal Act set in motion several later acts that redefined the "Indian Territory" to which Indians could be forcibly removed, including the Indian Intercourse Act of 30 June 1834. The Platte Purchase of 1836, the Kansas–Nebraska Act of 30 May 1854, and the establishment of Oklahoma Territory on 2 May 1890, among many other congressional measures, changed the boundaries of Indian Territory. The territory ceased to exist as a legal entity as result of the 16 June 1906 Oklahoma Enabling Act, which culminated in the creation of the state of Oklahoma on 16 November 1907. Indian reservations in the former Indian Territory, however, generally continued to be treated as semi-sovereign jurisdictions within Oklahoma, and they continue to define "Indian Country" within the state today.

The State of Sequoyah

This map of the 'State of Sequoyah' - complete with a proposed State Seal - was compiled from the USGS Map of Indian Territory (1902), revised to include the county divisions made under direction of Sequoyah Statehood Convention (1905), by D.W. Bolich, a civil engineer at Muskogee. It was found at this page of the McCasland Digital Collection of Early Oklahoma & Indian Territory Maps at the Oklahoma State University Library.

Oklahoma became the 46th state of the Union on 16 November 1907, from a merger of Oklahoma Territory and Indian Territory. Delaware County was established on Cherokee land in Indian Territory on 16 July 1907, 4 months before the state was formed. The territory and the county attracted a lot of migrants looking for new opportunities, including the Baldwin-Robbins and Collins-Baldwin families from Stites Idaho.

The 1910 census, using sheets designed for Indians, lists a number of members of the "Cherokee" whose fathers and mothers were also Cherokee. Practically all people enumerated as "Cherokee" are classified as "Full" in the "Indian" column of the "Race" section. In the case of "Full" Indians, the "White" and "Negro" columns are blank.

Cherokee who do not qualify as "Full" Indians have blood quanta specified the three columns "Indian White Negro" -- e.g., "1/2 1/2 0" and "3/4 1/4 0" and "7/8 1/8 0" among many other fractional breakdowns. The census instructions say the fractions should total "1" as they do in these examples.

Top