Sunday, June 14, 2015

Slave Cemetery in New Jersey

Published the 29th of September in 1934 in the National Labor Tribune out of Pittsburgh, PA
To Restore First Slave Cemetery in New Jersey
Mays Landing, N.J. – Historical societies plan to clear the debris form historical Shore Road cemetery, the first slave burying ground in New Jersey. The only identification now on the grounds is a plain marble slab bearing the inscription “Angelina Taylor, died September 5, 1833, aged eight-three years.” Historical writings frequently referred to the cemetery, which marked the first foothold of slavery in the state.

A high percentage of Quakers among the early settlers in this vicinity prevented great numbers of slaves at any times. At one time there were 12,000 slaves in the state, however, mostly in the northern portion. 

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Saturday Spotting - Unclaimed War Dead



Published in February 1900 in the Idaho Statesman out of Bosie ID

CANNOT FORWARD BODIES
OF UNCLAIMED DEAD

Portland, Or., Feb. 3 – There is a hitch between Governor Geer and Colonel Long at San Francisco over shipment of bodies of unclaimed Oregon dead to this state for burial. Governor Geer today telegraphed Colonel Long asking him to send all bodies of Second Oregon volunteers in his charge, and unclaimed by friends, to Portland in care of General Summers. The governor assured Colonel Long that the state of Oregon would bear the expense if the government would not.
The governor received a reply from Colonel Long stating that, under his instructions, he could not comply with the request as he had been ordered to bury at the Presidio all bodies not claimed by relatives of the deceased.
The governor sent a dispatch to Secretary of War Root stating that the state of Oregon desired permission to receive and inter the bodies of Second volunteers now in San Francisco and asking Secretary Root to telegraph Colonel Long instructions accordingly.


Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Tombstone Tuesday - Manlove & Mary Wilson of Middletown Delaware

I found this tombstone while walking through the Bethesda United Methodist Church Cemetery that is downtown on Main. This isn't a very large cemetery but they have some very interesting stones and families. I plan on sharing a few from this cemetery over the next few weeks, I know I still have some at Old St. Anne's Church Cemetery that I plan on sharing. 


MANLOVE D. WILSON
BORN
MARCH 5, 1819
DIED
JAN. 13, 1893.
HIS WIFE
MARY V. WILSON
BORN
AUG 26, 1825
DIED

JAN. 4, 1909.

[1]Delaware Marriage Record shows Manlove D. Wilson married Mary V Frame, date of marriage the 20th of January 1852.


[2]Delaware Marriage Record book in Sussex county shows Manlove D Wilson married Mary V Frame, date of marriage the 20th of January 1852.


[3]1860 United States Federal Census records in the Appoquinimink Hundred Township in the county of New Castle the state of Delaware. Manlove Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1819, white, male, born in DE, he is 41 years of age at the time of this census, his occupation is farmer, his value of real estate listed at 12,000, value of personal estate listed at 1,000. He is married to Mary Wilson d.o.b.  abt. 1827, white, female, born in DE, she is 33 years of age at the time of this census.  John P Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1853, white, male, born in DE, he is 7 years of age at the time of this census.  George Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1854, white, male, born in DE, he is 6 years of age at the time of this census.  Elizabeth C Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1857, white, female, born in DE, she is 3 years of age at the time of this census. Maulore Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1858, white, male, born in DE, he is 2 years of age at the time of the census.  Margarett Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1859, white, female, born in DE, she is 9 months of age at the time of the census. Also listed in the home is John Davis d.o.b. abt. 1831, black, male, born in DE, he is 29 years of age at the time of the census, occupation listed as farm laborer.   Joseph Young d.o.b. abt. 1840, black, male, born in DE, he is 20 years of age at the time of the census, occupation listed as farm laborer.  John Perry d.o.b. abt. 1841, black, male, born in DE, he is 19 years of age at the time of the census, occupation listed as farm laborer.




[4]1870 United State Federal Census records in the Appoquinimink Hundred Township in the county of New Castle the state of Delaware. Manlove D Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1819, white, male, born in DE, he is 51 years of age at the time of this census, his occupation is farmer, his value of real estate listed at 50,000, value of personal estate listed at 8,000. He is married to Mary Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1826, white, female, born in DE, she is 44 years of age at the time of this census, her occupation is listed as keeping house.  John Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1853, white, male, born in DE, 17 years of age at the time of this census, his occupation is works on farm.  George Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1855, white, male, born in DE, 15 years of age at the time of this census, his occupation is works on farm. Elizabeth Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1857, white, male, born in DE, 13 years of age at the time of this census.  Manlove Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1859, white, male, born in DE, 11 years of age at the time of this census.  Mary Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1861, white, female, born in DE, 9 years of age at the time of this census. William Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1862, white, female, born DE, 8 years of age at the time of this census.  Anna Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1864, white, female, born DE, 6 years of age at the time of this census.  Also listed in the home John Bristor d.o.b. abt. 1853, black, male, born in DE, 17 years of age at the time of this census.  George Washington d.o.b. abt. 1860, black, male, born in DE, 10 years of age at the time of this census.
**Special Note: John Davis, Joseph Young and John Perry who were listed on the 1860 census are not listed on the 1870 census.    


[5]1880 United States Federal Census record in Appopuinimink, New Castle County the state of Delaware. Manlove Wilson d.o.b. abt. 1819, white, male, born in DE, he is 61 years of age at the time of this census, occupation is farming. Mary V Wilson is listed as wife, d.o.b.  abt. 1827, white, female, born in DE, she is 53 years of age at the time of this census, occupation is keeping house. Elizabeth Wilson is listed as daughter, d.o.b. abt. 1857, white, female, single, born in DE, she is 23 years of age at the time of the census. Manton Wilson is listed as son, d.o.b. abt. 1859, white, male, single, born in DE, he is 21 years of age at the time of the census. Mary J Wilson is listed as daughter, d.o.b. abt. 1860, white, female, single, born in DE, she is 20 years of age at the time of the census. William Wilson is listed as son, d.o.b. abt, 1861, white, male, single, born in DE, 19 years of age at the time of the census.  Anna L Wilson is listed a daughter, d.o.b. abt. 1863, white, female, single, born in DE, she is 17 years of age at the time of the census. 
**Special Note: John Bristor and George Washington who were listed on the 1870 census are not listed on the 1880 census. 



[6]Delaware Death Record for Manlove Wilson shows is d.o.b. abt. 1819, date of death 13 January 1893 at 74 years of age, white, resided in Middletown, retired, married, male.

After doing a “quick pull” on Ancestry.com I logged intoFind A Grave and located some additional information on Mary V Wilson. Her full name was Mary Vaughn Frame, parents were George Frame (1797-1845) her mother was Elizabeth Jefferson Warrington (?-1879). She had two siblings listed on the site, Paynter Frame (1826-1906) and Anna Jefferson Frame Davis (1828-1905).




[1] Delaware Marriage Records, 1744-1912 Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com: accessed 8 June 2015) Delaware Public Archives. Record Group # RG 1325; Subgroup # 003; Series # 004.  

[2] Delaware Marriage Records, 1744-1912 Ancestry.com( http://www.ancestry.com: accessed 8 June 2015) Delaware Public Archives. Record Group # RG 1325; Subgroup # 003; Series # 004. 
[3] 1860 United States Federal Census Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com: accessed 8 June 2015) Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Census Place: Appoquinimink Hundred, New Castle, Delaware; Roll: M653_96; Page: 726; Image: 29; Family History Library Film: 803096 NARA microfilm publication M653, 1,438 rolls. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d. 
[4] 1870 United States Federal Census Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com: accessed 8 June 2015) Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Census Place: Appoquinimink Hundred, New Castle, Delaware; Roll: M593_120; Page: 425A; Image: 71; Family History Library Film: 545619 NARA microfilm publication M593, 1,761 rolls. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.
[5] 1880 United States Federal Census Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com: accessed 8 June 2015) Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2010.Census Place: Appoquinimink, New Castle, Delaware; Roll: 120; Family History Film: 1254120; Page: 391C; Enumeration District: 031; Image: 0302 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). 
[6] Ancestry.com. Delaware Death Records, 1811-1933 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. Delaware Vital Records. Microfilm. Delaware Public Archives, Dover.

Monday, June 8, 2015

Denounced Marriage

Finding out that one of your ancestors denounced their marriage to receive their last rights while on their death bed might seem harsh. Then again what does “denouncing your marriage” exactly mean? Did they not love each other? Is it a form of divorce to allow the soon to be widow or widower to remarry? Or is it simply a religious step you take to be buried in a Catholic cemetery alongside your first spouse?

Well for my family it was the later of the choices and this wasn’t that uncommon and I believe you might still hear about it today. My 2x great grandfather remarried shortly after the death of his first wife, whom was Catholic. My 2x great grandmother died at a young age and left 6 children for him to rear,   I’m sure most of you have run across situations similar to this one. Being a young widower himself and left with 6 children to rear he quickly sought a new spouse to help in the rearing of these children.  He and his second wife were married for some time and even had children of their own. Before his passing he wished to be buried along the side of his first wife.  But he was unable to do so because of his second marriage was not Catholic, their marriage was Protestant.  It was during this time he denounced his marriage so he could receive his last rights and be buried in the Catholic cemetery alongside of his first wife.  

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Sunday Cemetery - Vienna's Vandals



Published in  August 1920 in the San Jose Mercury News out of  San Jose, CA

Cemetery of Nameless 
Stripped by Vandals


 VIENNA, Aug. 2. – On the river bank in the outskirts of Vienna is the “Cemetery of the Nameless” where bodies taken form Danube are buried. Vandals have completely stripped it. Grave markings were removed and the coffins exhumed and broken up for firewood. 

Saturday, June 6, 2015

Saturday Spotting- Old Relics Still Standing


Published in November 1910 in the Grand Rapids Press out of Grand Rapids, MI

OLD TIME RELICS
Are Stone Houses on Front Street.
WERE BUILT LONG AGO
When River Front Was Choice Residence Section.
Two of Them Still Occupied by Members of Original Families – They Contain Quaint Furniture
     Seven of the old stone houses on Front street, each one a structure of soft gray, seem to administer in gentle rebuke to the noisy young factories surrounding them.
     The youngest of the houses is over sixty years old, but they were not built for the use of only one generation. Their firm foundations and solid walls have stood the test of time and they have watched more than a few structures built in a more recent and less substantial day fall into shabby disrepute.
     The first of the old stone house is at the corner of West Leonard and Front streets. This is the old Chubb place, but its original owners have long since passed into the unknown. The once handsome mansion is the least well preserved of any of the stone houses. It has changed hands many times and is now rented tenement fashion to a number of different families.
     The second on of the houses is the Holcomb house at the corner of Tenth and Front streets. This is the best preserved of any of them. Next it the Quine home, built by Boardman Nobles in 1849 at the corner of Fifth and Front streets. The Patton home at the corner of Sixth and Front streets was the home of the old Turner family. Next is the Courtright home. This house, though well preserved, has been much changed and is now being used for a boarding house.
     Near Third street on Front is the smallest and what is said to be the oldest of the stone houses, and on the corner of Second and Front streets is the home  of Miss Elizabeth Anderson, one of the few houses in which descendants of the early owner live.

All Have Colonial Features.
All of the houses have some architectural similarity. Every one is built with white columned colonial doorways, this style being brought form the New England states whence most of the early Grand Rapids settlers came. The old Turner home is almost a pure colonial structure.
     The Holcomb and Quine houses are the most interesting of any of the houses because in these two houses live women who came to Grand Rapids in pioneer days and saw the building of these beautiful old homes along the banks of the Grand river. At that time it was thought that the natural scenic advantages of the location would be taken advantage of and that a park would be built along the banks of the rapids, making Front street one of the most desirable residence districts in the city. How these plans happened to be abandoned and the location turned over the factories is history.
     Now where the early settlers once looked out from the windows of their homes onto the graceful sweep of the Grand river, its green banks lined on either side with magnificent elms and maples, nothing can be seen but rows of factories, with here and there it glimpse of the waters of the canal.

Still Live in Old Homes.
     Mrs. Henrietta A. Quine has lived in her home at Fifth and Front streets for the last forty-five years, but for some time she has not occupied the entire house. She has retired to the upper floor, taking with her beautiful old pieces of furniture which have been in the house for over half a century. This house in common with most of the stone houses has a big entrance hall of colonial design and a winding stairway.
     In the old Holcomb home, where the Holcomb family has lived for the last forty-eight years, lives Mrs. Mary Holcomb. This house differs somewhat form the others, being Gothic in architecture. The doorway, however, is colonial like the rest and so is the interior. This is the best preserved of any of the houses. In its wide entrance hall is an old-time hatrack seventy-five years old. Opening form the hall is the living room with the enormous fireplace surmounted by a wide mantel with cupboards set in the walls above it. The walls of these old stone houses are thirteen inches thick and the windows are set in with wide window seats. The interior finishing of the Holcomb house is of hard pine and the beautiful graining done more than fifty years ago by Mr. Van Houten is as good as when it was first completed. In the big parlor is a large old table make entirely by hand and seventy-five years old. Another cherished piece of furniture is a full length, gilt framed mirror brought form New York seventy years ago by Mrs. Holcomb’s father. In the corner of the room is an old fashioned “what-not” filled with china, a thing no longer manufactured and long since passed out of general use. Here also are two leather covered ottomans, things which have not been heard of in modern homes for more than twenty-five years. Then there is the enormous square piano made to order for the Holcomb family.

Furniture 100 Years Old.
     “There is scarcely a piece of furniture in my house that is less than fifty years old,” said Mrs. Holcomb, “and some of the chairs and old bureaus are nearly one hundred years old.” In the parlor is another big fireplace, built in the days when wood was burned with generous carelessness. “In the old days we used to have our wood shipped by the car load from the north,” said Mrs. Holcomb.
The upper floor is as interesting as the lower. Here are big chambers with low ceilings and inclined windows sloping back with the roof and forming deep alcoves where in the old days children played at housekeeping.
With the coming of the factories the original families living in the old houses were driven to more congenial residence districts, but these two women alone, Mrs. Holcomb and Mrs. Quine, loved the old homes and the old associations and have stayed in spite of the factories that press them in. They have shut themselves in with their beautiful old furniture and have shut out the noise and the smoke. It is easy, standing in their old colonial doorways or in the shade of the magnificent cottonwood trees in the Holcomb lawn, to forget the factory buildings and to see instead the winding beauty of the Grand river and the soft green banks and beautiful shade trees of the park which they once thought would grace its banks.