Saturday, June 4, 2016

The Fascinating Saga of the Sprague Family


               Ada Hartley’s mother was Phoebe Sprague.  It’s interesting that the grandmother that raised Clarence Goldsberry, Ada’s husband, was also named Phoebe.  And there are more Phoebes in this line!

                Phoebe Emaline Sprague was born December 18, 1858 in Athens County, OH.  She married Samuel Hartley in 1876.  They lived next door to her parents in the 1880 Census, in Canaan Township, Athens County.  By 1890, they were living in Lodi Township, where they continued to live until their deaths.  Samuel and Phoebe are buried at Graham Chapel Cemetery.
              Phoebe Sprague Hartley's death certificate naming her father as Harmon Sprague and
              her mother as Elvira Bobo.

               Sprague Family has played an integral part in the history of the state of Ohio and the nation.  I have spent hours researching this family, with my husband and sister’s help, and still have more to do!  I hope to complete an application for the Daughters of the American Revolution based on this family, but am still needing one piece of documentation.  We are heading to Missouri this summer to look for records there.

                I would encourage all my family members to read Sprague Families in America by Warren Vincent Sprague to understand the fascinating story of the Spragues.  It is available online.  The author was from Athens County, was a cousin of our ancestors, and spent years researching and interviewing for the book.

                Phoebe Sprague Hartley’s father was Harmon Sprague.  Harmon and his wife have about made me tear my hair out with their name variations!  Harmon was also called Hiram.  His wife’s name is sometimes written as Almira and sometimes Elvira.  I have joked that they must have either been terrible spellers or they had really bad speech defects that caused other people to write their names differently each time!

                Harmon was born October 23, 1828 in McConnellsville, Morgan County, Ohio.  He was the son of Isaac Sprague and Phoebe Elizabeth Hedden, but I cannot find a single legal document to substantiate that.  Birth records were not yet required when he was born, and I checked the Court House records in Morgan County to no avail.  The aforementioned book, Sprague Families in America, states that Harmon is the son of Isaac, but the DAR does not look at published genealogies as a definitive source.  His parents moved to Canaan Township, Athens County, Oh sometime after the 1830 census and before the 1850 Census.  In the 1850 Census, Harmon is living with his two older brothers, next door to their parents, making it impossible to use that census to prove the father/son relationship of Isaac and Harmon.
 

                Harmon married Irena Blakely on April 6, 1851 in Athens County.  The Blakely Family keeps popping up in my family tree.  There were three Blakely sisters.  Irena married into my paternal grandmother’s line, Caroline married into my Robinson Family on my mother’s side, and Adeline Blakely married into my mother’s Phillips Family. 
                                   Marriage record of Harmon Sprague and Irena Blakely
Soon after his marriage to Irena, Harmon, his parents, and his brothers went to work on the railroad in Illinois.  Working conditions were terrible.  The tracks often went through very swampy land.  Workers and their families were often victims of malaria, dengue, and cholera.  Irena died in Illinois, though I have not been able to find any record of her death, and Harmon was close to death.  Harmon knew several doctors back in Athens County who were related to him, and rode back to Athens on the train to get treatment.  The treatment was successful, and Harmon recovered, but he decided to stay in Athens instead of joining the rest of his family moving further west with the railroad. 

                Harmon married for the second time Almira/Elvira Bobo on August 21, 1856 in Athens County.  Phoebe was born about two years later. 
                                  Marriage record of Harmon Sprague and Almira Bobo
The family lived in Lodi Township until sometime before the 1870 Census, when they were living in Canaan Township, where they lived until their deaths.  Harmon and Almira are buried in Graham Chapel Cemetery.  Almira died in 1903.  Harmon spent the next four years talking to his grandson, John Sprague, about his family’s history, his Christian testimony, and the many revivals which took place at Graham Chapel. Harmon died in 1907.  Harmon and Almira’s graves were marked only by peony bushes for many years, until a descendant named Budd Sprague (John Sprague’s nephew) purchased a marker for them.  Budd told me several neighbors from around the church came to the cemetery while the marker was being placed to tell him what wonderful people Harmon and Almira were.  Budd Sprague has written down the memories which his Uncle John shared with him, and I was fortunate to read through them. 

 

                Harmon’s parents were Isaac and Phoebe Tyler Hedden (a widow with children when Isaac married her).  Isaac was born March 1, 1797 in Coal Run, Washington County, Ohio, before Ohio was a state.  His mother died when he was a little boy, and he was probably only 14 when his father died.  He spent most of his time with his Uncle Jonathan Sprague, who was closest in age to Nehemiah.  Isaac’s grandfather, Joshua Sprague, left him land in Franklin County, Ohio.  I have read that it was in the Brice Road area.  Joshua had been given the land in the “Refugee Tracts” for serving the Revolutionary cause, and having been banished from Canada.  Joshua probably gave it to Isaac in order to help him get started, since Isaac’s father, Nehemiah, had died while Isaac was young.
                          Refugee Land Grant to Isaac Sprague

Isaac married Phoebe Elizabeth (Tyler) Hedden in McConnellsville, on December 26, 1823.  Phoebe was a widow of John Hedden. They lived in McConnelsville for several years, with Isaac running the ferry there. 
                       Marriage record of Isaac Sprague and Phoebe Hedden
The 1830 census shows them as living in Morgan Township in Morgan County with their three children and three other children between the ages of 10 and 15, which were probably Phoebe’s children from her previous marriage.  They moved to Canaan Township, Athens County, OH in 1840 and lived there until at least 1850, but then moved to Decatur, Iowa before 1860 and Speedwell, St. Clair County, MO before 1870.  Isaac died in Lebeck, Cedar County, MO on November 12, 1876.  Lebeck is no longer a town, and is about two miles north of Cedar Springs.  There are no records of where he is buried.  I am hoping to search court house records this summer to see if I can find any records of his estate.

                Isaac’s father was Nehemiah Sprague.  Nehemiah was born in 1770 in Sackville, Nova Scotia.  His family moved back to Rhode Island when he was six years old, then moved again to Adams, Massachusetts.  He stayed in Massachusetts with his mother and siblings in 1788 when his father and two older brothers, William and Jonathan, left for Marietta.  He did not go when his father came back for the rest of the family in 1789, but was in Marietta by 1790 and lived in Fort Frye during the Indian troubles.

On March 11, 1791, Nehemiah’s younger brother, Wilbur, left the fort before daylight to do his chores on the family property.  He was shot by a group of Indians as he headed back to the fort.  He was hit in the hip.  Nehemiah and older brother Jonathan ran out of the fort amid a shower of bullets to bring Wilbur back into the fort.  Wilbur was crippled for the rest of his life.

On another occasion, Indians attacked Jonathan, Nehemiah, and two other boys right outside the fort.  The Indians captured one of the other boys, Daniel Convers, who was taken to the Indian village in Detroit.  He escaped and finally returned to Marietta almost three years later.  He said he was always treated very well by the Indians.   An Indian bullet grazed Jonathan during this skirmish, leaving seven holes in his shirt because of the way it hung in folds. 

  Nehemiah married first Mary Lowe, who is supposed to have been born in Adams Township, Washington County, OH in 1780. They had five children. After she died, he married Mary Mason, daughter of William and Rebecca Sharp Mason, who came to Ohio in 1797. They had three children, the youngest who was born four months after Nehemiah died.
                       Marriage record of Nehemiah Sprague and Mary Mason 

Nehemiah was a farmer, and his farm on the Muskingum River was known as the “Ridgeway Farm.” It was not far from his brother Jonathan’s farm. Nehemiah had five children by his first wife and three by his second.  Isaac, our direct line ancestor, was the firstborn son of his first wife.  Nehemiah died in Coal Run, Washington County, OH on February 2, 1811, only 41 years old. The story has been handed down that Nehemiah came across a young boy traveling down the river who was very ill.  Nehemiah took care of him, even after discovering that the boy was sick from smallpox.  He cared for the boy himself to keep from spreading the disease to anyone else.  The boy died, and Nehemiah buried him immediately, hoping to prevent spreading the disease.  However, Nehemiah had already contracted the disease and died soon after.  His grave is in the Devol Cemetery, close to the Jonathan Sprague home on Muskingum River Road.  Also in this cemetery is Wilbur Sprague’s grave, Nehemiah’s younger brother who was wounded by the Indians.
                                                                        The Devol Cemetery


 

                Nehemiah’s father was Joshua Sprague, a Revolutionary War soldier, who was born July 3, 1729 in Smithfield, Rhode Island.  On April 22, 1750, Joshua married Amy Darling first, then Abigail Wilbur.  He immigrated to Nova Scotia in 1762.  Land was made available in Canada when the French Arcadian were driven out by the British during the French-Canadian War.  The Sprague family took up a homestead of several hundred acres at the town of Sackville, and lived there for about 14 years, but was driven out by the British when hostilities began with the American colonies.  Joshua and his family had to leave with only the clothes on their backs. They returned first to Rhode Island, then to Massachusetts.

                Joshua enlisted as a private in Col. Archibald Crary’s Regiment in 1776, when he was 47 years old.  In Massachusetts, he served as a Major in Colonel Joab Stafford’s Company and fought in the battle of Bennington on August 16, 1777.  He marched to Fish Kill on June 6, 1778 to serve in Colonel Diamond’s Regiment, but was rejected as unfit for service.  But then, in October, 1779, he enlisted as a private in Captain Barne’s Company, then Colonel Israel Chapens’ Third Regiment.
               Joshua Sprague's military records state that he was six feet tall and of light complexion.  Sprague Families in America states that he was of "more than ordinary strength and energy."
After the war, Joshua and his sons, William and Jonathan, worked at the carpenter trade, building boats.  They moved to Simrell’s Ferry, on the Monongahela River, bringing their tool chest on a two-wheeled cart drawn by one horse.  Their plan was to build boats on the river for the many people planning to migrate west.  It is believed that they built the boat, the “New Mayflower,” that carried Rufus Putnam and the first settlers in Ohio.    However, when the Ohio Company arrived in Marietta, they discovered they did not have adequate carpenters, and persuaded Joshua and his sons to come to help build the stockade.
                             A model of a long boat at the Campus Martius Museum.


A life-size replica of a long boat, outside the Campus Martius Museum. 

Joshua arrived in Marietta, Ohio with two of his sons on June 22, 1788, just 6 ½ weeks after “The First 48.”  Joshua, his sons Jonathan and William, were contracted to build some of the “block houses” at Campus Martius (for which he was paid $100). Rufus Putnam, head of the Ohio Company, lived in one of the blockhouses.  After the trouble with the Indians settled down, most of the fort was dismantled and used to build individual homes, Rufus Putnam added on to the blockhouse, and it is still on its original site, with the Campus Martius museum built around it.  It is possible, but not proven, that this is the blockhouse that Joshua and his sons built.  If it is not the exact structure, it is almost identical to the one that they built.  It is not known for sure if the Spragues built more than one of the blockhouses.
 The Rufus Putnam home, added upon one of the original blockhouses of Campus
  Martius.  It is now inside the Campus Martius Museum, the museum having
  been built around the home. 

 

The interior of the Rufus Putnam house includes two pieces of furniture built by Jonathan Sprague, Joshua’s oldest son:  a tilt-top table chair and a corner cupboard.  These pieces of furniture came from Jonathan Sprague home.

 

In the fall, Joshua returned to his home in Massachusetts, and in the next spring brought his family, including the wife and children of his son William, and two of the children of his son Elijah, who had died. In the spring of 1789, two new settlements were established by settlers spreading out from Marietta.  Nineteen families, including Joshua, William, Jonathan and their families and Wilbur, single, are listed as those who first made camp at Tuttle’s Run (about ½ mile east of the present town of Beverly.) The settlers found a prairie that had been cultivated years earlier by the Indians and were able to quickly clear it by setting fire to it.  In January, 1791, Indians attacked at “Big Bottom,” killing 12 and capturing 5.  There is a monument in Big Bottom State Park on State Route #266. The remaining settlers immediately decided to build a fort.  Fort Frye, as it was named, was a very unique design.  It was an irregular triangular shape, with the long side of the triangle running along the river bank for about 200 yards.  There was a blacksmith shop and two wells in the center of the yard.  It was reported that living at Fort Frye was much more enjoyable than Campus Martius because Campus Martius was run more like a military installation.  They lived in the stockade for seven years, until the trouble with Indians was over.
 

                When Joshua and his wife were older, they moved in with son Jonathan in Adams Township.  Jonathan’s home still stands, and is one of the oldest in Ohio. It sits on top a hill overlooking the Muskingum River in Washington County and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.  Architectural historians say that the house is a fine example of Federal architecture.  When it was completed in 1800, it was the first stone house to be built anywhere in Washington County.  The barn was completed in 1803, and is one of the oldest barns still standing in Ohio.
 

Joshua died October 1, 1816 in Coal Run, Washington County, OH.  He was 87 years old, and left 163 descendants, including nine sons.  His wife, Abigail, died on December 6. 1828 at the age of 95.  He is buried in the Sprague Family Cemetery in Coal Run, Washington County, OH, close to Jonathan’s home.  Both Joshua and Abigail were said to be tall with fair complexion.  Joshua was said to be a man of “more than ordinary strength and energy.”  It is interesting that one census recorder said he did not need to ask the last name of anyone settled in the Coal Run area because the Spragues had such a distinctive appearance.
                                                                Joshua Sprague

                                         Abigail, Consort (wife) of Joshua Sprague

                  The Sprague Cemetery, very close to the Devol Cemetery.

Jeff and I were able to visit Campus Martius Museum in Marietta last summer, as well as the Sprague and Devol Cemeteries.  I was able to sit in the table chair built by Jonathan Sprague, touch the corner cupboard built by Jonathan, and see his house and barn on the banks of the Muskingum River. I met a gentleman in the Historical Society Library who put me in touch with Budd Sprague. 
 
                   This is the view looking down to the Muskingum River from the
                    Sprague Cemetery.  The white dot on the right is Jeff, waiting on
                    the road while I climbed through the weeds up to find Joshua
                    Sprague's grave.  We had only longitude and latitude coordinates
                    to find the cemetery.
                                   

This summer, I am hoping to visit the Court House and Historical Society in Missouri and find some record of Isaac Sprague which would establish him as Harmon’s father. 

It is interesting to read the history of the settlement of Ohio, and to realize our ancestor was so involved.  In the book, History of Marietta and Washington County, we find that the Ohio Company was a committee of men determined to settle the frontier.  They made detailed plans for their trip into the frontier.  The “First 48” settlers of Ohio were to include four surveyors, a superintendent of surveyors, 22 men to attend the surveyors, 20 men to include six boat builders, four home carpenters, one blacksmith, and nine common workmen.  The men were furnished with one axe (for clearing the land), one hoe (to cultivate the land), and their sustenance.  They were allowed 30 pounds of personal baggage.  The men were to bring with themselves a good small arm, bayonet, six flints, a powder horn and pouch, priming wire and brush, half a pound of powder, one pound of balls, and one pound of buckshot.   They would be paid four dollars per month.  They were subject to military-type command.  Most of the men were Revolutionary War veterans and were used to following orders.  The “First 48” arrived April 7, 1788.  Joshua Sprague and sons arrived there on June 22, 1788.

In 1788, George Washington said, "No colony in America was ever settled under such favorable auspices as that which has just commenced at the Muskingum...If I was a young man, just preparing to begin the world, or if advanced in life and had a family to make provision for, I know of no country where I should rather fix my habitation..."

When Marietta was first settled, there was no uniform currency. Ledgers were usually kept in pounds, shillings, and pence, but each of the New England colonies had their own way of determining the value.  Actually payment was usually in the form of bartering.  Dollars and cents, based on the metric system, were confusing for years for the early settlers. 

The majority of the settlers were farmers, so they chose the “wide bottoms” close to the river, which was the only highway into the territory.  However, their first crop of corn was almost all killed by an extremely early frost in the fall of 1789, which resulted in a near famine.  The settlers were always grateful to a neighbor across the Ohio River whose crop was not affected by the frost and was willing to share with the new settlers.  In 1791, the settlers who had gone on about 40 miles north of Marietta were attacked by Indians and 12 were killed.  Then the Indians lurked around Marietta, driving off cattle, and making for some very nervous settlers.  Many were ready to abandon the settlement and return east. 

There were still a few buffalo around when Joshua Sprague first came to Ohio, as well as elk, but they disappeared soon after.  There is record of a man killing six buffaloes in the winter of 1792.  Deer, turkey, bear, panthers, wolves and wild cats were plentiful.  The wolves were especially hard to keep away from the settlers’ livestock.  The river was full of fish, and the common method of catching them was gigging with a spear.  A man gigged a pike which weighed 96 pounds, and cooked it for a 4th of July celebration in 1790.


                Joshua’s father was William Sprague II, who was born February 2, 1691 in Providence, RI.  He married Ellis (Alice) Brown on September 16, 1714.  They had six children. By 1728 to 1731, he was made a Lieutenant in the Providence Militia.  By 1732, he was made Captain.  He donated land for the first Baptist meeting house in 1738. After Ellis died, he married a second time Mrs. Mercy (Mary) Walling on August 26, 1744.  There were no children born to this marriage.   He died October 20, 1778 in Smithfield, RI, at the age of 88. 

                William Sprague II’s father was Jonathan Sprague, born May 28, 1648 in Hingham, Plymouth County, MA.  Jonathan was named after an older brother who had died ten months before he was born. The brother was only six years old when he died.  He married Mehitable Holbrook on July 20, 1670 in Weymouth, Norfolk, MA.  They moved to Providence, RI in 1681, probably because of their religious beliefs.  He served as a deputy to the General Assembly, as Justice of the Peace, and Speaker of the House of Deputies.   He worked on a committee to establish the northern boundary of the settlement. In 1722, he wrote a long letter to three prominent Presbyterian ministers in Massachusetts who wanted to establish a church in Providence.  Jonathan was a Baptist, and failed to see the necessity of a Presbyterian church in the settlement. The First Freewill Baptist Church of Smithfield in Greenville, RI, traces its founding to the Baptist church begun by the Spragues.  The church’s history states that the “first settled pastor was Elder Jonathan Sprague.”  Jonathan and Mehitable had at least ten children.  Jonathan died and is buried in Providence County, RI.

                Jonathan’s father was William Sprague I.  William was born in 1609 in England and came with his brothers, Ralph and Richard, to America in 1629, landing in Salem, MA.  William was the youngest of the three brothers. It is thought that they sailed on the ship Abigail with Governor Endicott, and landed at Salem on September 6, 1628. Soon after arriving in Massachusetts, the brothers were commissioned by Governor Endicott of Salem to explore land beyond the settlement, a vast forest between the Mystic River and the Charles River.  The Albergeuian Indians were living there, and the Sprague brothers worked out a peace agreement with them.  That area became the town of Charlestown, which was later absorbed into Boston.  The brothers helped found the first church in Boston.

William married Millicent Eames in 1635 in Charlestown, Suffolk County, MA.  In 1636, he and his father-in-law, obtained grants of land in Hingham and moved there.  He served as a “Selectman,” Constable, and Collector of Town Rates.  He and Millicent had at least 13 children. Our ancestor, Jonathan, was William’s second son to be named Jonathan.  The first Jonathan died the year before the second Jonathan was born, when the first was only six years old.   William died in Hingham, Plymouth County, MA, October 26, 1675.
                    Record of William Sprague's Death in 1675

               What a fascinating family!  Hopefully, I will have more information to add to their story soon!  Someday I would like to write a series of children's books based on this family.
 

 

 

 

Saturday, May 28, 2016

The Hartley Family


               Ada E. Hartley’s father was Samuel Edwin Hartley, born April 12, 1854 in Millersburg, Meigs County, Ohio.  He married Phoebe (Phebe, Pheebe, Feebee) Sprague in 1876 and the Sprague Family is the family I have spent the most time researching……more to come in future posts!

                I do not have a birth record for Samuel (at least, not yet), but we know who his parents are from his death certificate:  Henry Hartley and Elizabeth Hull Hartley.  Clarence and Ada Hartley Goldsberry lived with Samuel for several years, and Clarence and Samuel seem to have had a farming business relationship.  There are several mentions in the local news section of the Athens Messenger of Clarence and Samuel making a business trip to Athens, or taking a load of hay to Athens.  Another mention of Samuel Hartley in the Athens Messenger is not so complimentary.  The February 13, 1902 edition states that Samuel Hartley was indicted upon assault and battery upon Miss Alice Cook, tried before the petit jury, found guilty and fined $25.  I would love to know what happened there! Samuel is buried at Graham Chapel in Lodi Township, Athens County, OH.
 
 



                 We can find Henry Hartley, Samuel’s father, in the 1840 and 1850 Census records in Meigs County, Ohio.  By 1860, he is in Athens Township, Athens County and in 1870, he is in Lodi Township, Athens County.  Earlier census records are less certain.  There are tax records for Henry Hartley in Columbiana County, OH for the years of 1833-1838.  In the 1830 and 1820 Census, I believe Henry is living with his father, Edward Hartley in Columbiana County.  Those census do not name each member of the household, but there is a male child of the right age to be Henry, who was born in 1809 in Pennsylvania .  I know that Edward is the father of Henry because he is named in his father’s will.

 

                Side note: It is important to remember that Ohio’s county boundaries have changed over the years.  In 1803, there were only 17 named counties.  Columbiana County was in northeastern Ohio, adjoining Washington County to the south.  Athens County would have been a part of Washington County at that time.  To add to the confusion in tracing this family, we need to remember county and state boundaries changed in other states as well.  Obviously, West Virginia used to be all Virginia.  Pennsylvania northern boundaries changed.  Connecticut used to claim all of northern Ohio.

 
                Edward Hartley was born in 1781 in Pennsylvania.  Our proof that he was born in PA is found in the 1860 Census, where he is living with his son Abram and states he was born in PA, but then the 1850 Census states that he was born in VA.  However, I found him in the 1810 Census in PA, and found no Edward Hartley in VA in 1810.  He was in PA until at least 1810, where Henry was born.  Edward was in Columbiana County by the 1820 Census. Edward died in 1861 in Columbiana County, OH.

                From here on, I am mostly relying on other researchers.  Several state that Edward’s parents are Roger Hartley III and Dorothy Riley Hartley.   Rodger III was born in PA on March 19, 1733 and is recorded in Society of Friends records, Buckingham Monthly Meeting in Bucks County, PA.  His father was also a Rodger (II), born 1702, who was married to Rebecca Packer on June 21, 1727 in Burlington County, NJ (just across the border from Bucks County, PA). 



               Rodger II purchased 100 acres from William Penn in Solebury, PA.  He also had 50 acres was deeded to him by his father.  Rodger II’s parents were Edward Hartley, born May 16, 1666 in England. He arrived with his brother Henry and Edward’s wife, Sarah Midgley, sometime after their marriage in 1693 in England and before the first record of him purchasing land in 1700. 


           




               Edward’s mother was Alice Vipoint, whose family was well-known in the English Quaker circles.  His father was Rodger Hartley (the first, at least as far as I know).  His birth was recorded in the Hardshire Society of Friends in Lancashire, England. There is not any documentation of Edward joining the Society of Friends when he arrived in America, but his sons later did.
 
 
                Edward outlived his son Rodger, as proven by Edward’s will, dated June 13, 1744.  His property was left to his son Thomas, son John, daughter Jenet, and to his son Roger Hartley’s seven children. 



 

 

Thursday, May 26, 2016

A Sweet, Fragile Flower


              In the previous 24 posts I have written about my ancestors on my Grandpa Clarence Goldsberry’s side.  We have gone back nine and ten generations, with the earliest ancestor arriving at Plymouth Rock in 1621.  Now I am going to turn my attention to my Grandma Ada Goldsberry and her ancestors.
 

                Ada E. Hartley was born January 14, 1890 in Lodi Township, Athens County, Ohio.  She was the youngest of five children, three sisters and one brother.  I had always thought her middle name was Ellen, but her birth certificate says Ada Ethel.  Her obituary says Ada Ellen.  I guess I wasn’t the only one confused!
 
Birth record for Ada Ethel Hartley
 
 
Ada Ellen Goldsberry Obituary

 
                I remember Grandma Goldsberry having coal black hair until the day she died at the age of 79.  She was a tiny little lady.  My dad used to say “she wouldn’t weigh more than 80 pounds soaking wet.”  What is really amazing is that she had babies that supposedly weighed over 10 pounds (though I’m not sure what home scale was used!)  She was frail, both physically and mentally.  I always remember her sitting in a wicker rocker in the corner of the living room, barely speaking when we would go to visit.  I have had the privilege of rocking my own babies and grandbabies in that same wicker rocker.  Ada was admitted to the Athens State Hospital for severe depressions several times during her life, and it was there she died on the day after Christmas, 1969.
Clarence and Ada on their wedding day
 
Clarence and Ada on their 50th anniversary


 

                Ada married Clarence Goldsberry on July 13, 1907 when she was only 17 years old.  They lived with Ada’s parents until at least 1910.  She had her first child, Grace Katherine, in 1911 when she was 21.  Ralph Emerson was born in 1914; John Dale in 1918; Ruth Irene in 1924; and David in 1935.  By the time David was born, Ada’s health was poor enough that Allen and Glenna Goldsberry (Clarence’s niece) adopted David.  The older children were left to pretty well fend for themselves, with Grace taking on the housekeeping responsibilities at a young age and never marrying or moving out of the family home. 

The last picture I have of Grandma and Grandpa Goldsberry
 
 


Clarence and Ada and their five children
 
                Ada’s cause of death was listed as pneumonia.  She was buried at the Burson Cemetery in Shade, Ohio.

 

                Ada Hartley Goldsberry has a fascinating family history, and I only wish she had been able to tell me about it.  I am eager to share about her amazing ancestors in future posts!

Saturday, May 21, 2016

A Quaker Before William Penn Was A Quaker!


                The wife of John Cutler was Margery Hayhurst (also spelled Hairst and Hearst).  She was born in Easington, Yorkshire, England on March 29, 1671.  She arrived in America on one of William Penn’s ships, with her parents and four siblings in 1682.  The Hayhursts were some of the earliest Quakers in England, including Margery’s parents and grandparents.  They became Quakers in 1652, about fourteen years before William Penn!  Margery's father, Cuthbert Hayhurst III, was in a position of leadership in the church, and suffered persecution for his beliefs.  He was imprisoned several times, including one time for a period of twelve years, 1654-1666.  Cuthbert III and Mary Rudd (or Reed) were married in England in 1666. Imagine their excitement when they heard of the possibility of going to America, where they could worship as they pleased!  Sadly, Cuthbert died in the spring following his arrival to America in 1682, but he died knowing his family would never be persecuted for their beliefs.   As was common with the Quakers, another member wrote a testimony of Cuthbert’s Christian life, which follows:

                “That faithful servant of the Lord, Cuthbert Hayhurst, who departed this life, at his own house in the County of Bucks in Pennsylvania, about the 5th of the 1st month, 1682-83, near the fiftieth year of his age.  He was born at Easington, in Bolland, in the county of York, in Old England, and was one of the worthies in Israel.  My spirit is comforted in a sense of that power, which did attend him in our meetings, for many years in the land of our nativity, and also after he came into these parts; he having been a valiant soldier for the Truth, and borne a faithful testimony to the same, in word, life, and conversation.  He went through many great exercises and imprisonments, and was a comfort unto the faithful and true believers, who follow the Lamb through many tribulations.  He was a worthy instrument in the Lord’s hand against the false teachers and hirelings, going several times to their steeple-houses, and testifying against their deceiving the people.  He also went to several market towns, and, at their crosses, declared and published the Truth as it is in Jesus.  I accompanied him and his dear wife at one of them, where he faithfully warned the people, and exhorted them to repentance; the Divine power and presence eminently attending him, which my soul was made sensible of, to my comfort and satisfaction.

                I can say he was of great service to me and many others, being instrumental in ringing us near unto the Lord, whose name over all we have cause to bless on his behalf; and although his body is gone to the earth, his memorial liveth among the righteous, and I am persuaded his soul is in the enjoyment of peace with the Lord.  I was often with him in the time of his sickness, and beheld his meek, innocent, and lamb-like deportment; being also by his bedside when he departed, which was in a quiet and truly resigned frame, like one falling into a sweet sleep; so that I have great cause to believe he is one of those that died in the Lord, and is at rest with Him for ever.”

                                                                                                                                           

Source: U.S. and UK Quaker Published Memorials, 1818-1919.


                Mary died just four years later, when Margery was only 16 years old, in a new country, when both of her parents had died.  She married John Cutler in 1702 and died in 1723.       

 

For Further Reading:
The History of Bucks County, From the Discovery of the Delaware to the Present Day by William Watts Hart Davis (available on Google Books).      

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Thomas Bills Married Sisters, Granddaughters of Plymouth Pilgrims


                Mercy Bills Cutler, wife of Benjamin Cutler, was born in 1715 in Monmouth County, New Jersey.  She married Benjamin in Middletown Township, Bucks County, PA on December 16, 1731.  She had transferred her membership from the Shrewsbury Monthly Meeting to Middletown Monthly Meeting two months prior to their marriage. 
 

                Mercy’s parents were Nathaniel and Mary Gardiner Bills.  Nathaniel’s will, proved March 31, 1729, lists his children:  Thomas, Girsham, Daniel, Marcey (Mercy), Catherine, Joanah, and Elisabeth.  Nathaniel must not have been literate, as the will is signed with his mark, not his signature.  On the other hand, the will states he is “very sick and weak,” so maybe he was too ill to sign his name.  Mary had died the year prior.  Mary was the daughter of Richard and Hanna Grover Gardiner and was born in Eastham, MA.
 

                Nathaniel was the son of Thomas and Joanna Twining Bills and was also born in Eastham, MA.  His birth is recorded in the Town Records:
 


                Thomas Bills was born in 1650 in Eastham, MA.  He married first Anna Twining, on October 3, 1672.  Anna died three years later, and then Thomas married her sister, Joanna, in 1676.  Thomas was a weaver by trade, and moved around quite a bit.  He lived at Yarmouth, MA, Burlington, NJ, and Shrewsbury, NJ. He is thought to be the son of William Bills, one of the first settlers of Cape Cod.
 

                The Twining sisters were the granddaughters of Stephen Deane, a Pilgrim who arrived at Plymouth in the second ship, The Fortune, in November, 1621 and built the first corn mill in the colony.   Isn’t that something that we have an ancestor who arrived at Plymouth around the time of the first Thanksgiving feast?  The Pilgrim must have been so excited to have a ship arrive after barely surviving their first winter, but The Fortune brought very little supplies and more mouths to feed.  It has been fascinating to read more about the Pilgrims and the settlement at Plymouth. 

                The Twining sister’s grandmother, Widow Mary Ring, was also a Plymouth Pilgrim.  The Ring Family was on the ship Speedwell, which was to accompany the Mayflower.  The Speedwell leaked so badly that it had to turn back to England almost immediately.  Mary’s husband, William, became ill and died.  Mary stayed in Holland for nine years, then brought her three children to America in 1629.  We are related to the Ring Family through Ada Goldsberry’s ancestors as well as Clarence Goldsberry’s ancestors.  More about that later!

     Thomas Bills died in Monmouth County, NJ on April 2, 1721.  Joanna died in 1723.
 

Saturday, May 7, 2016

Mercy Me! Disowned and with Presidential Ties!


     Phoebe Lovett Goldsberry’s ancestors, the Lovett family, was described in a previous blog (4/12/16).  Her family, members of the Society of Friends (Quakers) have many records in the Friends Meeting Minutes.  There are many, many pages of Minutes, of which I have read only a few.  Owen Lovett, Phoebe’s great-grandfather is hard to find in the records.  Perhaps this is because he had a relatively short life, dying when he was just forty years old.  On the other hand, he may have left the Quaker church.

     Owen’s wife, however, is another story.  Mercy Stackhouse (1756-1845) is mentioned often in the Meeting Minutes.  Her birth is recorded in the Falls Meeting Minutes on December 4, 1756.  Her parents were Joshua and Margery Cutler Stackhouse.  Her marriage to Owen Lovett is recorded in Northampton County, PA on March 11, 1776.  She was “condemned” by Falls Church for “marrying out of unity,” which means Owen was not a member of a Quaker congregation at the time.  There is also a condemnation for her “outgoing in marriage” in 1789 and in 1827, a Mercy Lovett was “disowned.”  A certificate of disownment is dated on April 4, 1833.  However, a Mercy Lovett, designated a widow, is back on the list of members in 1835.  More research is needed to understand exactly what all went on with our dear Mercy. 
 

     Joshua Stackhouse, Mercy’s father, was the son of Joseph and Sarah Stackhouse, and his birth is recorded in the Middletown Meeting Minutes as being the 21st day of the 5th month in 1732.  One might think that that would be May 21, but until 1751, the Quakers used March 25 as the beginning of the year.  Experts have transcribed his birthdate as July 21, 1732.  His married Margery Cutler on November 22, 1753.  He shows up in the Septennial Census of Pennsylvania in 1786, and died later that year on September 3, 1786.
 

     Joshua’s father, Joseph Stackhouse, was born to Thomas and Grace Stackhouse on July 20, 1703.  His mother died when he was only five years old.  He married Sarah Copeland on May 20, 1725, which was recorded in the Middletown Meeting Minutes.  He died June 7, 1774.
 

      Thomas Stackhouse came to America in 1682, in the fleet of ships arranged by William Penn.  He traveled with his uncle, who was also named Thomas.  Thomas, the nephew, was sometimes listed as Thomas, Jr. even though he was not the son of Thomas, Sr. 
Thomas Stackhouse Property (south of New Town, east of river)
 
Thomas, Jr. was very involved in community affairs, representing his county in the Colonial Assembly of Pennsylvania from 1711-1715.  He also served as a county commissioner, whose duties included laying out roads.  He helped build the first Middletown Meeting House, which they used until they outgrew the space about 1720.  The new Meeting House, built of stone, is still standing in Langhorne, PA, and still in use with the Society of Friends.  Services are at 11 a.m. on Sunday mornings.

     Thomas must not have been able to read and write when he arrived in America because when the members were asked to sign a pledge to not sell rum to the Indians, he had to just make his mark.  However, in 1697, there is a record of him borrowing a “primer” from the Meeting, and must have learned, along with his children, because in 1725, he was able to sign his own name on his son’s marriage certificate. 

     Thomas married three times.  He had nine children with his first wife, Grace Heaton, including our direct-line ancestor, Joseph.  After Grace died, he had five children with his second wife, Ann Mayos.  After Ann’s death, he married Dorothy Heston, but they had no children together.
 

     One of the most interesting facts about the Stackhouse Family is that the George Bush Family is also descended from Thomas Stackhouse!  Imagine that, we share a bloodline with two U.S. Presidents!