Tuesday, October 2, 2018

My Family Tree: digest version

Me

I was born in Norfolk, and moved with my family to Princess Anne County (which later became Virginia Beach) when I was just five years old. As a result, my personal roots are firmly planted in Kempsville, a historic and close-knit community in Virginia Beach. I raised my four boys where there had been a field when I was young, just bicycling distance from my childhood home.

My parents

My parents, John Beverly Zaun and Virginia Maude Crofford, met and married in Norfolk, Virginia. They were both students at Maury High School. John went to trade school and began a satisfying, lifelong career with Landmark; he was video tape engineer for WTAR-TV, and later Chief engineer for WTAR/WLTY radio. Virginia completed two years of college at William and Mary Extension (now ODU), and worked as church organist (Emmanuel Episcopal Church) and piano teacher, then as secretary in various positions, with congressman Bill Whitehurst, and the City of Virginia Beach, with the police detective bureau and with city planning. John died in 1998 (probable pulmonary embolism) and is buried at Rosewood Cemetery on Witchduck Road in Virginia Beach. Virginia died on Aug. 13, 2022, and is buried next to John. 

My grandparents

My father's parents were both born in Richmond, Virginia. Earnest Earl Zaun was one of five children and grew up in Dumbarton. My paternal grandmother, Jacqueline Delmar Abbott, the youngest of three sisters and three half-brothers, also lived in the Dumbarton area. "Ernie" and "Jack's" first date was taking the train to Buckroe Beach in Hampton for the day. They were engaged at ages 19 and 17; his engagement gift to her was a cedar chest, which I now have in my upstairs bedroom. Just after the Depression, my father's parents unhappily tore themselves away from their families moved to Norfolk in search of work. They had two children, My father, "Bev," born in Richmond, and a daughter, Jacqueline Gail who was born in Norfolk. Ernie worked as a bookkeeper for Dalton and Bundy Lumberyard in Norfolk. I have his leather tape measure in my box of keepsakes. Ernie was an adult class Bible teacher at the Christian Temple in Norfolk. Jacqueline was a lifelong, devoted member of the church. Ernie tragically died after a botched gall bladder surgery when he was just 49 years old. This sent the family into a tailspin and they never really recovered. My dad became his mother's protector; my aunt took her into her home to live for a time. She recovered eventually and worked as library assistant at the Virginia Beach Oceanfront Library for 19 years. She lived on her own at the Mayflower in Virginia Beach, then at Luther Manor apartments. Jacqueline had only a 9th grade education, but was an avid reader and a formidable Scrabble opponent. She died in her sleep in 1998. She and Ernie are both buried at Rosewood Cemetery.

My mother's parents married in 1926, and had two children, both born in Waukegan. Horace Calvin Crofford lived with his mother, Ada, in Waukegan, and went to engineering school at AMBU in Chicago. Teresa Marie Allen (nee Ethelyn) worked as a nurse/receptionist at a doctor's office (Dr. Jolley, ENT) in Waukegan. Horace and Teresa met in Chicago at some kind of political event. Horace was born in Buffalo Gap, South Dakota and grew up on a ranch in Newcastle, Wyoming. He joined the Army and served in France in WWI as a telegrapher. Teresa was born in either Illinois or Iowa, and her family moved to Wichita, Kansas around 1899 during the real estate boom there. Her parents were apparently divorced in 1904, and Teresa, age 10, was sent to a Catholic boarding school in Paris, Texas, where she was later trained as a nurse. She lived in a boarding house with her best friend Maude and worked in Oklahoma City. She moved to Chicago in the early 1920's. Sadly, she never knew what became of her parents. The Crofford family moved to Virginia in 1942 in search of work. Horace found work as an electrician at the Naval base in Norfolk. Horace told stories and sang songs of the wild west. Teresa was a dedicated adult class Sunday School teacher in the Nazarene Church. She died of breast cancer in 1966, and Horace died two years later. They are buried at Rosewood Cemetery in Virginia Beach.

My great-grandparents

My paternal grandfather's parents, John Adam Zaun and Georgia Ella Powell, met and married in Richmond. They lived at 4611 Penix Road in Dumbarton, and raised five children there. "Adam" was a cement contractor - I remember there were always cement statuary and garden features in their yard. Adam was born in Henrico County; Georgia, by some unexplained circumstances, was born in Iowa, though her siblings were all born in Richmond. Adam died in 1969; Georgia died in 1973. Both are buried in Bethlehem Baptist Church cemetery on Penix Rd.

My paternal grandmother's parents, George Wright Abbott and Ida Rene Bryant, met in New Jersey, though they lived in Richmond near Ida's sons after they married. George was born in Fort Lee, New Jersey. Ida Rene was born in Southampton County, Virginia, one of a set of identical twins. Her twin, Addie, lived with her husband Bluke in Princess Anne County, which was probably a major factor in bringing my father's parents to Norfolk. Ida's brother was married to George's half-sister; Ida visited them in New Jersey, meeting George for the first time when she was 26 and he was only ten. The Abbotts owned a piano parts business; Charles Bryant, Ida's brother was a piano salesman in NJ. Ida was 37, a widow, when she and George married in 1905; George was only 21. They had four children: three daughters (Jacqueline the youngest) and a son, George, Jr., who died as an infant. The Abbotts are buried in Bethlehem Baptist Church cemetery on Penix Rd.

My maternal grandfather's parents were from pioneer families. Horace's father, also named Horace Calvin Crofford, moved as a young man to the Black Hills of South Dakota from Nebraska, in search of gold. His mother, Ada Clemina Hall, was born in Chittenango, New York, but traveled west with her family to Michigan, then to Dakota Territory, being one of the first settlers of Fargo. They eventually moved to Fort Lincoln, hoping for military escort to the Black Hills of South Dakota. Ada was a schoolteacher in Fort Lincoln while they lived there for a year or so. They finally got to the Black Hills and settled on a ranch there. That is where she met Horace, at a meeting to discuss banding together against the threat of an Indian uprising. Horace was a sheep rancher. Ada was a teacher, writer, historian, and inventor. They had three sons and a daughter, who were raised in Newcastle, Wyoming. Horace was once arrested for murder; he killed a cattle rancher in a dispute over grazing land but was later exonerated. They inexplicably moved to Polk County, Missouri around 1915 (Civil War land grant?), where Horace died the following year. After that, Ada lived in at various times with her children, in Montana, Illinois, and Wisconsin. She died in 1930 and is buried near Twin Lakes, WI.

My maternal grandmother's parents married in Schuyler County, Illinois in 1883. Augustus Dozier Allen, was born in Hancock County, Illinois. Eva Louise Bosworth was born in nearby Schuyler County. They had one daughter, Ethelyn, in 1893. They moved across the river to Keokuk, Iowa for seven years where Augustus was a merchant. They moved to Wichita, Kansas around 1899, where Augustus worked for the Bureau of Immigration, then for a real estate company, B. D. Allen (no relation). The last known mention of the family was a news article about Augustus' birthday party in March 1903. After that, Eva was listed as "widowed" in the city directory. Augustus (not deceased), married Miss Emma Schindler, a housekeeper, in 1905. Their daughter Ethelyn was sent to a boarding school in Texas where she changed her name to Teresa Marie. About that time, Eva was committed to an asylum in Woodward, Oklahoma where she died and was buried in 1911. Augustus was committed to an insane asylum in Miami County, Kansas in 1917. He died two weeks after admission.

My 2X great grandparents

John Adam Zaun's parents were both born in Germany. John Adam Zaun (Soun) and Elizabeth Louisa Wellner, along with her parents, Peter and Barbara, traveled to America on the same ship arriving in New York in 1867. They married in Richmond, Virginia, in 1868 and raised their families in Dumbarton. They died in 1922 and 1924, respectively, and are buried in Bethlehem Baptist Church Cemetery on Penix Road.

Georgia Powell's parents, Jefferson Monroe Powell and Maria Louise Judd, married in Richmond in 1880. "Jeff" was born in Richmond; "Louise" in New York City. They met, supposedly, on a farm owned by her father on the Mechanicsville Turnpike; however I cannot determine whether this property is in Virginia, as her father, Orrin Judd, had no documented ties to Virginia. The Powells had at least nine children, some of whom died in infancy. They lived for one or two years in Iowa, where Georgia was born, but moved back to Richmond. Jefferson worked as a salesperson in a grocery store. Maria was a beloved Sunday School teacher and superintendent at Bethlehem Baptist Church. They are both buried there.

George Abbott's parents were Whitfield Barrie Abbott and Sarah "Sadie" Wright. They lived in Coytesville, New Jersey. Whitfield was a teacher at the Rennsalaer Institute in New York City. He died in 1889 at 45 years old. Sadie went to work in the family piano manufacturing business making action parts. They had five children, only two survived infanthood. She died in 1903.

Ida Rene's parents, Eley Bryant and Margaret Cobb, were both born in Southampton County, Virginia. Both families were original settlers with land grants from colonial times. Eley, a farmer, was a POW in the Civil War, held captive for a year at Point Lookout, Maryland. He and Margaret had nine children. They moved to Princess Anne County around 1885, then Eley died in 1887. Their son William and his wife, Bonnie Abbott lived with Margaret on their farm, which was near her daughter Addie's farm at Pungo Ferry Rd. William and Bonnie moved back to New Jersey and Margaret moved to Richmond around 1900. I do not know where Eley and Margaret are buried, but am guessing that it might be on the family property in Blackwater.

Horace Calvin Crofford, Sr.'s parents were Calvin Crofford and Anna Dillingham. Calvin was born in either Vermont or more likely, New York, the son of a Genessee Valley millwright named Horace. Calvin was one of the early settlers of Jackson Township in Porter County, Indiana. Anna's family came from New England, lived for a time in Ohio, and were early settlers of Liberty Township in Porter County, Indiana. Anna taught school in the livingroom of her father's house. Calvin and Anna married in 1839 (she was a widow). They had seven children - 3 girls and 5 boys. They moved to Missouri for a time, then to Lincoln, Nebraska where they received a grant of land under the Homestead Act. Calvin died in 1880, and Anna went to live with her son, Charles in South Dakota. She died in 1900 and was buried in Edgemont Cemetery in Fall River County, SD.

Ada Hall's parents, Andrew Hall and Miriam Olivia Wandell, were born in New York. They pioneered westward, living in Oswego, NY and then Marquette, MI, where Andrew worked as a miner. He volunteered with the Michigan Volunteer Infantry in 1861 and trained at Newport News, Virginia. He was a surgical assistant during the Peninsula Campaign of the Civil War, but fell ill after less than a year and was sent to the hospital at Fort Slocum in David's Island, NY. Months later, he rejoined his suffering, starving family in Michigan and resumed working in the mines. They eventually moved across the river to Fargo, being one of the first settlers after the railroad bridge was built over from Michigan. They later traveled south and spent a year at Fort Lincoln, then moved with military accompaniment to the Black Hills. They owned a ranch at or near what is now Sturgis, SD - neighbors often gathered at "Old Man" Hall's ranch for meetings. Andrew died in 1907, leaving land in Newcastle to his daughter Ada. "Olivia" died in 1908. Both are buried in Greenwood Cemetery in Newcastle.

Augustus Allen's parents, Robert Scott Allen and Elizabeth Highland were married in 1833 in Hamilton County, Ohio, just across the Ohio River from Covington, Kenton County, KY. Robert was born in Virginia and moved to Kentucky; Elizabeth was born in Ohio. They had eight children in Kentucky, then they moved to Hancock County, Illinois, where they had two more children including my ancestor Augustus. Robert joined the Illinois Infantry in 1862 and survived the Civil War only to die at the war's end in 1864. He is buried at Tioga Schoolhouse in Hancock County. Elizabeth died in 1896 and is buried in Springdale Cemetery in Peoria, Illinois, where she lived out her last days with her son Jacob.

Eva Bosworth's parents, Orlando Marcus Bosworth and Eliza Ann Applegate, were married in 1853 in Schuyler County, Illinois. They had three children, only two of whom survived to adulthood. Orlando died in 1884 and is buried at Bethany Cemetery at Littleton. Eliza went to live with Augustus and Eva in Wichita, where her son Richard also lived. She is listed on the 1900 U.S. Census in Wichita, although she actually died in 1899. She is buried with Orlando at Bethany Cemetery.

My 3X great grandparents and beyond... 

Paternal:

Zaun/Soun - from Mainz, Germany.

Wellner, Peter and Barbara - from Germany

Powell, George James and Mary Ellen Stevens - George fought at the Siege of Petersburg and the battle at Sailor's Creek. He was captured at Farmville three days before the surrender at Appomatox. He died before 1870, but I have found no documentation. Mary Ellen lived until 1901 in Richmond.

Judd, Orrin Bishop and Elizabeth MacDonald - Orrin was a Baptist preacher and well known theologian in Connecticut. He is connected to the founding of Colgate University and leaves a family legacy there. He wrote the translation of the Book of Matthew that is the accepted version by the American Bible Society. Elizabeth was a journalist for the New York Tribune. Their highly-publicized, scandalous divorce led to her suicide by laudanum  in 1874 at her millinery shop in Norwalk, Connecticut, after her children were taken from her by the court. Elizabeth's parents were Alexander MacDonald and Elizabeth Borjan, both of New York, but I have not been able to trace her family back any further. The Judd family can be traced back to early New England colonists, with famous names such as Bradley, Thorpe, Welles (Governor Thomas Welles of Connecticut) and can be traced back to famous royalty in England, Spain, and France, including Phillippe III of France and Isabelle De Aragon of Spain in the 1200's, Edward II of England in the early 1300's, and Lord Berkeley, 1400's.

Abbott, John C. and Sarah Whitfield - Abbott and Sons; piano forte (music table) maker from London. Moved to NY City then to Hackensack, NJ. The Whitfield family goes back to early New England colonial times with famous names such as Godfrey, Greene, Sabin, and Ashton. Their family tree extends back into 14th Century England and Wales aristocracy with the Pemberton and Bushe families (including a famous poet Ieuan) and includes Roger Williams, founder of Providence, RI.

Wright, William of New York, and Anna Walker of Ireland - unable to trace back further.

Bryant - traces back to Lewis Bryant born in 1690 in England, the original grantee of land in Southampton County. Family names in Southampton County are Joyner, Owens, Monroe, Chandler, Edmunds, Drake, Underwood.

Cobb of Southampton County - traces back to 1690, Thomas and Isabella Edwards of Wales.

Maternal:

Crawford/Crofford - Horace Crawford of Scotland and Lois Hopkins, settled in the Genessee Valley in NY in the early 1800's. The spelling of the name changed to Crofford in about the 1850's.

Dillingham, John and Hannah Hiccox -  the parents of John Dillingham cannot be confirmed, but he is known to be from RI or Massachusetts. Perhaps the family was originally from Wales. The Hiccox family can be traced back to England in the 1600's, it's most famous member being Capt. Samuel Hickock of New Haven, CT. Family names include Foote, Merrill, Hopkins, Thompkins, Sutcliff, and Warner.

Hall - can be traced back to 1500's England. Early New England colonial names are Lyman, Doolittle, Austin, English, Cunnabel, King, Lewis, and Allen.

Wandell - Capt. Jacob Wandell built a wealthy shipping company on the Hudson River. His family can be traced back to the Netherlands where a direct ancestor was Joost Van Der Vondell, the famous playwright and poet, whose works are still being performed today. Vondelpark in Amsterdam is dedicated to his name. Jacob's mother was Catherine Stilwell, descended from the famous Nicholas Stilwell, who was married to Anne Hopton, lady-in-waiting to Holland's Queen Elizabeth, the Winter Queen (after whom "Elizabeth City" and the "Elizabeth River" are named. Nicholas Stilwell was a tobacco grower at Yorktown during the time of the Jamestown colonists, and went on to settle Gravesend, NY. Jacob was married to Miriam Haight, whose father, William Haight owned land that was confiscated and later became known as Sing Sing (or Ossining), NY. Jacob served in the Revolutionary War as quartermaster under George Washington, and was with him at Valley Forge. He knew the Marquis De Lafayette - years after the war, Lafayette visited NY and recognized Jacob (by then an old man) on the street and gave him a hug. Jacob's discharge papers are on exhibit in Washington's headquarters at Newburgh, NY.

Allen, John Watson and Rebeckah Scott - from Lunenburg County, Virginia, they married in 1794. The Allen ancestors originally came from Hanover County, and descended from Capt. Charles Lilburne Lewis (I have a copy of his Revolutionary War journal), and Augustine Warner, grandfather to George Washington. Meriwether Lewis is also connected to this family. Charles' land in New Kent County was called Chemokins, which is still a working farm where, incredibly, my Uncle Herman worked as a teenager. The Rebeckah Scott's grandfather was Leonard Dozier, a third generation French Hugenot whose grandfather Leonard Dozier settled in Lunenburg County, Virginia.

Highland - nothing is known of Elizabeth Highland's parents except that her father was possibly named Thomas and lived in Ohio. Her mother is listed on the 1880 U.S.Census as "Sarah House," born in Pennsylvania.

Bosworth, Joseph Bucklin and Lucinda Hopkins - Joseph B. Bosworth was a leader in the Mormon Church, serving directly under Joseph Smith. His name is mentioned in Joseph Smith's journals. The Bosworth family can be traced back to the 1500's in New England, and are descendants of multiple Mayflower passengers, including John Howland and Elizabeth Tilley. Benajah Bosworth served in the Revolutionary War as a musician. Lucinda's father was Capt. Daniel Hopkins of Providence, RI.

Applegate, Richard Pierce and Tabitha Hawley - Richard P. Applegate was a veteran of the War of 1812. Thomas Applegate came from England in the 1500's and settled in Rhode Island. His property was known as "Applegat's Plaine." The Applegate descendants moved to New Jersey where they are included in many documents and history books there. Tabitha was born in Kentucky to Absalom Hawley. I have not been able to trace that line back any further.

Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Results: 21% DNA - Ireland/Scotland/Wales

My DNA reveals that I have 21% Irish/Scottish/Welsh ancestry. I have ruled out any significant amount of Irish blood in my family, which is too bad considering that my son is traveling to Ireland next Spring... I was hoping to find some places of origin for him to explore. The Scotland and Wales connections are easier to identify.

Scotland
The Croffords are most certainly from Scotland. The original Horace Crawford (Crawfurd, Craufurd) came from Scotland to New York and settled in the Genessee Valley. He was a millwright. Horace is my 3X great grandfather. My primary source is a document written by my great grandmother Ada Crofford. Granted, she sometimes has errors in her family histories, but Horace would have been a close relative - her father-in-law - so the likelihood of error in information about him is less. The Crofford DNA is probably enough to account for most of the 21% Scottish blood in me.

Clan Map of Scotland (Crawford)
The Crawford clan originates in the Southern part of Scotland
Crawford Castle
Crawford Castle was in existence in 1175
Wales
John Dillingham, my 3rd great grandfather whose daughter Anna married Calvin Crawford, is said to have come to America from Wales. This particular piece of family lore is in question, but is mentioned in several fairly reliable sources.

Then there is my 14th great grandfather, Sir Ieuan Deulwyn Bushe. born in 1427 at Rodes Court in Carmarthenshire, Wales. He was a famous poet whose work (50 poems) has survived to the present day. Whitfield Barrie Abbott is descended from the Bushe line through the Sabin family.



Sunday, June 10, 2018

Breakthrough with the Allen family!

If you searched back through this blog you would find several posts lamenting the gaps in my research regarding the Allen family. Finally, finally, I found what I was looking for!

Buried deep in a publication by the DAR was a detailed genealogy of my great grandfather Augustus Allen. It confirmed his lineage back to the Allens of Mecklenburg Va. It also revealed that his middle name was Dozier and gave the date of his death. There was a lot more information that fleshed out his family tree. The link to the Dozier family adds an interesting twist to our family story...I knew we were connected to the Doziers of Lunenburg County by DNA, but until now, could not confirm the lineage. The Doziers were French Huguenots who became respected leaders in early Virginia history.

This is what I found at first...a mere snippet:

It took some digging in the DAR archives to find the actual article... so very exciting!

Here is the lineage denoted in the article... the DAR couldn't be wrong, could they?

Augustus Dozier Allen, b. 1859, Illinois, son of...
Robert Scott Allen, b. 1797, Lunenburg, Virginia, son of...
John Watson Allen, b. 1769, Lunenburg, Virginia, son of...
Turner Allen, b. 1751, Mecklenburg, Virginia, son of...
William Allen, b. 1725...

William's parentage gets a little muddy but there is evidence that his father was from New Kent County. I think a visit to the Library of Virginia is in order.

Full text of the article from DAR Magazine, May 1988, pp. 352-353:





http://services.dar.org/members/magazine_archive/download/?file=DARMAG_1988_05.pdf

Sunday, April 15, 2018

Midwest Cemeteries

As Drew and I traveled back home from Minneapolis this week, our route from Minnesota to Virginia included two of my "bucket list" cemeteries. It was moving experience to stand at the graves of the ancestors that I have come to know through my research.

Ada Crofford
The first cemetery we visited was "Mound Prairie Cemetery" in Twin Lakes, near Kenosha on the southeastern corner of Wisconsin by the shore of Lake Michigan. We approached the cemetery on a long, lonely country road in the middle of cornfields that stretched as far as we could see.  Not too far away is a beautiful lake that appears to be in the middle of a resort community. 
Mound Prairie Cemetery is just ahead at the line of trees.
We turned into the cemetery, drove toward the back and parked. Methodically, we walked up and down the rows of gravestones looking for Ada Crofford's. Ada was my maternal great grandmother. I knew a lot about her life and this was a big moment for me. After a while, Drew called me over. Ada's stone was barely readable, but there she was next to Robert Luke, her son-in-law, and two of the Luke grandchildren, Catherine and Lowell.  
I stood for a few long minutes at this grave.

Looking back toward the entrance to the cemetery. Ada's grave
can be seen along the road to the right, beside the graves
of the Luke family.
My thoughts of Ada as I stood there were to marvel at how she lived in so many places and lived such a rough pioneer life only to end up in this place that had nothing to do with her life. She was born in New York. She had lived in Michigan, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Montana, Washington, Missouri, and Illinois. Then finally buried in Wisconsin. Her very life and death represents the restless spirit of the Old West. 

Drew and I searched in vain for my great aunt Miriam's grave. Miriam was my grandfather's sister. I have memories of receiving regular gifts in the mail as a child from Aunt Miriam. She was married first to Robert Luke, then to Mr. Darrow. We walked around for a good 30-45 minutes looking at every gravestone. I came to the conclusion that maybe she wasn't buried there after all. After I got home, I did some checking and found that she is buried there and we just missed it somehow. Here is a picture of her gravestone that I found online:

From Findagrave.com
I learned from Mom that Miriam's first husband Robert Luke was killed at age 40 by a train that hit his car. After further searching, I learned that two of Miriam's daughters, Emma and Catherine, twins, were also killed in separate automobile accidents. [Mom kept a gold bracelet that had belonged to her cousins.] Catherine and Robert are buried next to Ada at Twin Lakes. There was a news article about the three family tragedies:

John Dillingham
The next cemetery we visited was in Liberty, Indiana. We stopped first at the Brown museum in an old house in nearby Chesterton. The ladies who worked there were enthusiastic and brought out many binders of documentation on my ancestor, John Dillingham, who was an original settler in the area. We set out for Liberty, traveled down more country roads and almost missed the tiny plot of graves. The Dillingham monuments stood tall among the other worn headstones in the tiny family cemetery. A power substation was built next to the plot. 

From behind the cemetery looking toward the road.

Olcott, John's son by his first wife, Clarissa.
Olcott had traveled with John from Ohio to settle in Indiana.

Standing next to John Dillingham's gravestone.
Hannah's memorial is on the other side of the same
monument.
Later, a fellow relative in the Dillingham family (Cole) sent me a photo of something I missed seeing... the house of Olcott Dillingham, son of John Dillingham. It was right behind the cemetery but seemed like private property so I hadn't explored it. John Dillingham, my 3Xgg, probably lived in this house at the end of his life. Amazing to imagine!

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Whitfield Barrie Abbott, 1844-1889

Whitfield Barrie Abbott was born on July 18, 1844 in New Jersey, to John C. and Sarah "Sally" Godfrey Whitfield Abbott. The Abbotts owned a hotel/boarding house in Hackensack, NJ; others who lived in the house were a mixed assortment of folks from England, New York, New Jersey, Germany, Ireland, and South America. The tenants worked either at the hotel or at the Abbott Piano Factory.

At age 16, Whitfield was living in a large boarding house in NY City and was working as a "clerk" according to the 1860 Census; he was also counted on the census at his parents' home in Hackensack that year. From 1863-66, he attended the Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute in New York City. By 1870, he was back home living with his extended family in Hackensack, working at his father's piano factory. He was married with two daughters. In 1876, he purchased land in Ridgefield, Bergen, New Jersey, on Palisades Ave (1500 block - see below). By 1880, he was widowed with three children - Bonnie, May, and Barrett - and was working as a school teacher near his home in Coytesville, a borough of Fort Lee.

Here is a current street view of that property location. It's commercial land now.
Whitfield's house was on the lot at the far right of this picture. It is now a bank building.
The property is very near the NJ Tnpk where it crosses the George Washington Bridge.


Gertrude Clayton Abbott
Whitfield was married twice. His first marriage was to Gertrude Clayton, by whom he had five children; three survived to adulthood:

  • Rebecca "Bonnie" Godfrey Curtis Abbott, b. 1868, 
  • Mary "May" Clayton Abbott, b. 1870, 
  • Barrett H. Abbott, b. 1873 (d.?), 
  • Whitfield Barry Abbott, Jr., b. 1873,  
  • Sarah Godfrey Abbott, b. 1874 (d.?). 

Gertrude died in 1879. Whitfield then married Sarah A. "Sadie" Wright in June 1882 in the Dutch Reformed Free Church. They had five children; two survived to adulthood:

  • George Wright Abbott, b. Aug. 1882, 
  • William Smith Abbott, b. 1883 (d. 1884), 
  • Alice Barry Abbott, b. 1886 (d. 1887), 
  • John A. Abbott b. 1887 (d. 1887), and 
  • Leonie Abbott, b. 1889.
Whitfield died in December 1889; his last will was dated 17 September 1889, just ten days before Leonie was born. Sadie died in 1903.

Some interesting notes:
  • I have received much information about the Abbott family from M.W. in NJ. He has copies of the Abbott family bible and many documents of the family history. He is descended from May Abbott Eggers, the second eldest daughter of Whitfield and Gertrude. 
  • Barry Vaughan was named after Whitfield Barrie Abbott (as George Wright Abbott requested).
  • A recent DNA test shows that Glenn Watson's son Ben is descended from Whitfield through May Abbott Eggers' family.
  • May's son Ray Eggers was an avid genealogist who did most of the Abbott family research before it could be done by computer. He traveled all up and down the east coast and sent many information-packed letters to Miriam Lukhard, which I now have in my possession.

Monday, February 12, 2018

Princess Anne County history: where we fit in

Long time Virginia Beach City Councilwoman Barbara Henley gave a two-hour talk to the ILR this morning about the history of Pungo. It was fascinating, but I quickly realized that my family is not quite as deeply rooted in old Princess Anne County as I thought. Blucher Fletcher did not live at the property on Blackwater Road until about 1880. Before then, according to an old map, it was a 1500 acre estate owned by a man named Augustus C. Smith. The Fletcher family's migration northward from North Carolina was typical of the way that the southern part of county was populated.


My 2X great grandfather Eley Bryant bought the farm at Blackwater and Head of River Road around 1885. Eley died in 1895 so he was definitely not a long term resident of the county. Margaret lived there until around 1900, and shortly thereafter, the Fletchers moved to Ocean View. So, all in all, my family claimed citizenship in Princess Anne County for less than 20 years. 


UPDATE 9/20/21: I discovered that we had the incorrect location for the Bryant farm. Looking at the old handwritten map above - the Bryants purchased the land owned by Johnston Forbes. You can see his name hand written on the map at Head of River Road. Also, I learned that the Fletchers did not own the land on Pungo Ferry Road all the way back to the North Landing River. They owned the land along Blackwater Road on both sides of Pungo ferry Road, shown in the gray area on the map. Their property extended south to the mill.

There are many families "down county" whose roots go back to the 1600's.

The Bryant farm was where "John D. Lewis" 
is shown, next to the Cox farm at the corner of 
Blackwater and Head of River Roads.

The length of Blackwater Rd showing the area
of both family farms.



Friday, January 5, 2018

Mayflower

Here is the line of descendancy from our Mayflower ancestors, John Howland and Elizabeth Tilley:

1. John Howland m. Elizabeth Tilley (1624, Plymouth)
2. Hannah Howland m. Jonathan Bosworth (1661)
3. Ichabod Bosworth m. Mary ________ (after 1710)
4. Benjamin Bosworth m. Anne Collins 
5. Benajah Bosworth m. _____________.
6. Joseph Bosworth m. Lucinda Hopkins
7. Orlando Marcus Bosworth m. Eliza Ann Applegate
8. Eva L Bosworth m. Augustus D. Allen (1883)
9. Ethelyn (Teresa) Allen m. Horace C. Crofford (1926)
10. Virginia Crofford m. John Zaun (1950)
11. Teresa Zaun m. Michael Austin (1976)

I would like to give a brief summary of each of these lives and follow their migration through the generations across our country. 

John Howland was born in Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire, England to Henry and Margaret (____) Howland. Elizabeth Tilley was born to John and Joan (Hurst) Tilley and baptized in 1607 at Henlow, Bedfordshore, England. Elizabeth sailed to Plymouth on the Mayflower with her parents when she was only 12 years old. Gov. Bradford wrote an account of the voyage, telling about John being thrown into the sea during a storm. John managed to hold onto a line and was pulled back on board with a boat hook. John Howland and Elizabeth Tilley married on March 25, 1624 at Plymouth. Their children were: John, Jabez, Isaac, Desiree, Hope, Elizabeth, Lydia, Hannah, and Ruth. John died at Plymouth in 1672/3. Elizabeth died at Swansea in 1687 at 79 years old.

Hannah Howland, born in Plymouth, married Jonathan Bosworth in 1661. They had 8 children: Mercy, Hannah, Elizabeth, Jonathan (died at age 10), David, John, Jabez, Ichabod, and Jonathan.

Ichabod Bosworth was born in March 18, 1676 at Swansea. He first married Sarah Stacey and had six children, the first three children dying in infancy. After Sarah died in 1710, apparently in childbirth, Ichabod married Mary ______ and had four more children: Sarah, Jonathan, Benjamin, and Joseph. Ichabod was a blacksmith in Rehoboth for a time, near the border of Bellingham, Mass and Cumberland, R.I.*

Benjamin Bosworth (Bozworth) was born in either Mendon or Bellingham ca. 1716.  He married Anne Collins at Providence, R.I. on October 23, 1743. Benjamin owned land in Scituate, R.I. He died on November 16, 1790. His son, Benajah, was his eldest and administrator of his estate.

Benajah Bosworth was born ca. 1744. He enlisted in the army in 1775 and joined Crary's troop from Rhode Island. His wife is unknown (perhaps Bucklin), but the 1800 census shows a wife, 5 sons, and 6 daughters.

Joseph Bucklin Bosworth was born in Providence, R.I. in 1790, the 3rd or 4th son of Benajah. He is by far the most interesting character in this family line! He served as a musician in the War of 1812. He migrated to Ohio and became a highly respected minister in the Mormon church, directly under Joseph Smith (see Joseph Smith's diaries). He married Lucinda Hopkins on May 17, 1815; they had eleven children: William, Elvira, Albert, Miles, Giles, Carlos, Orlando Marcus, Omer, Benejah, Malon, and Joseph Bucklin, Jr. Joseph and Lucinda lived most of their lives in Copley, Ohio. Joseph died in 1850 of cholera while visiting his son Miles in Peoria, Illinois.

Orlando Marcus Bosworth was born April 19, 1825 in Summit, Ohio. He joined the military and fought in the Mexican War. He married Eliza Ann Applegate on February 3, 1853 in Schuyler, Illinois. They had three children: James (died at infancy), Richard, and Eva. Orlando and Eliza resided in Littleton, Illinois. Orlando died on November 6, 1884.

Eva L. Bosworth (middle name Louise according to family lore) was born in June 1867 in Littleton, Illinois. Her story is perhaps the saddest. She married Augustus D. Allen of nearby Hancock County, Illinois on November 25, 1883 at age 16 (Augustus was 24). They moved across the river to Keokuk, Iowa, then to Wichita, Kansas in 1900. Their only child, Ethelyn was born in July 1893. Eva died in a mental institution at Old Fort Supply in Woodward, Oklahoma in 1911.

Ethelyn Allen (named later changed to Teresa Marie) was born in July 1893, location unknown. Family lore places her birth in Chicago, but that is unlikely. According to the timeline, she could have been born in Hancock County or Schuyler County, Illinois, or possibly in Keokuk, Iowa. Ethelyn lived with her parents in Wichita until around 1903. Sometime after that she was sent to an orphanage or boarding school in Paris, Texas. Her mother was living alone in Wichita in 1904; her father remarried in 1905. There is no further documentation of "Ethelyn" after 1903. The first mention of "Teresa" is in 1916 in Sherman, Texas, where she worked as a student nurse. She graduated from nursing school in 1919 at which time she attempted unsuccessfully to locate her father. She worked as a nurse in Oklahoma City according to the census in 1920. She moved to Chicago, Illinois, where she married Horace Calvin Crofford in 1926. They resided in Waukegan, Illinois where Teresa worked as a private secretary/assistant to an Ear, Nose, and Throat doctor. There they had two children, Horace Calvin, Jr. and Virginia Maude. The family moved to Virginia in search of employment in the early 1940's. Teresa died in 1966 of breast cancer. She never knew anything about her family history or what became of her parents. She never even knew her birthday or birth year.

Virginia Maude Crofford was born on March 3, 1932 in Waukegan, Illinois. She attended school there until 5th grade when her family moved to Norfolk, Virginia. She married John Beverly Zaun in 1952; they had two children, Teresa Jacqueline and Holly Diana.

From England to Plymouth to Ohio to Illinois and Iowa, to Kansas, then Oklahoma and Texas; back to Illinois and then to Virginia... almost full circle.

*Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, v. 23, pt. 1