28 August 2023

William C. Mayhew family: Whispers from the Grave; Klaiber Cemetery, Boyd County, Kentucky

 

Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber 2023


Background removed using AI a rather grainy scan provided by Joy Mayhew Heard 2010

William C. Mayhew was born 2 November 1832 in Greenup County, Kentucky. His parents, William and Matilda Kazee Mayhew, were married in Greenup County 1 December 1829[i].  His grandparents, Myra and Rebecca Curran Farmer[ii] Mayhew, also married in Greenup County, Kentucky 13 January 1805.

William crossed the river to marry Mary Elizabeth “May” Ross the 19th of June 1854 in Lawrence County, Ohio[iii].  She was a daughter of the first judge of Boyd County, John D. Ross.  Her mother was Susan Lockwood Ross, another pioneer family from Boyd County.

Boyd County, Kentucky was formed in 1860 from portions of Greenup and Lawrence County, Kentucky.  That year the census shows the family with three children: Grace, John D, and Susan.  The census indicates that William has no value in real estate at that time.  In all they had a total of six children, all born between 1854 and 1872.  The other children included: George W., John D., Susan Evangeline, Dimma and James Taylor Mayhew.  All the children were born on Big Garner, Boyd County, Kentucky. 

The first tax list of Boyd County shows William Mayhew with no land values but does own a horse and one cow.  By 1862 William C. Mayhew is enlisted in the county militia and now had two horses and two cows.

William C. Mayhew enlisted in the 45th Regiment, Kentucky Infantry (Union), Company K on 7 October 1863 at the courthouse in Louisa, Lawrence County, Kentucky. He mustered out at Catlettsburg on 14 February 1865.

 

 


The 1866 Boyd County tax list shows William being assessed for 158 acres on Garner.[i]  Their property adjoined what is today this compilers land at the fork of Solomon’s Branch and Long Branch.  The family once again has two horses, two cows and William is still on the county militia list. As late as 1871 he served the Boyd County Militia, at the age of 39.

In April 1875 the Mayhew’s daughter married Charles W. Diamond.  John D Ross deeded 12 acres on Garner, for love and affection to both William and Mary Elizabeth in 1885[ii] and   daughter Susan married in June 1886 to John Henry Harris. 

William C. Mayhew died 3 May 1890 and was buried in Klaiber Cemetery, Long Branch Road, Boyd County, Kentucky, on the road where he resided.



Two years after William died, son George purchased a “lot” in the cemetery described as “…on a point nearly opposite the mansion house and on the south side of the creek the same is for a grave yard where William Mayhew is now buried….[i]”  The grantor was Henry Powell Sexton who owned the land surrounding the property.

Daughter Dimma was friends with Lorain Klaiber whose nickname was Raney.  In April 1893 the young ladies of Garner attended a quarterly church meeting[ii].  Dimma died 9 April 1895 and was buried next to her father on the point. At one time there was a fence around the plot.


Mary Elizabeth Ross Mayhew continued to live on Garner until her death 8 September 1904.  She is also buried on the point next to William.

Mary Elizabeth Ross Mayhew



I wrote about the Mayhew’s son-in-law John Henry Harris in May.  John Henry Harris, Eva, and their children, resided with her widowed mother, Mary Mayhew in 1900, on Garner, Boyd County, Kentucky.  In the 1970’s the state of Kentucky conducted a project to collect and catalog cemeteries in the state of Kentucky.  Evelyn Jackson was coordinator in Boyd County.  Besides “reading” stones she collected information from family and caretakers of the family cemeteries.  Among the names listed in Klaiber Cemetery is “Flora Mayhew” with no dates.  There is a field stone in the Mayhew plot.  When John Henry Harris died in 1909 he was buried in Klaiber Cemetery close to the Mayhew plot.  The Mayhew’s did not have a daughter Flora.  But John Henry Harris and Susan “Eva” Mayhew Harris had a daughter Flora born in December 1889.  Flora was the granddaughter of William and Mary Elizabeth Mayhew.  This compiler believes that the KHS cemetery reading may be incorrect and should read “Flora Harris.”   I believe she died between 1900 and 1910.  Nola Harris wrote me in 2009 stating: “all I have…is my great – aunt Angie’s word (Mary Angeline Harris Pelfry) and I don’t know if there is existing family bible records.  Angie called it Sexton Cemetery[i] and said that her dad, mom, and little sister were all buried there.  The only gravestone seems to be that of her father John H. Harris.”

There is no stone for Susan Evangeline “Eva” Mayhew Harris either but it does appear there is an unmarked grave next to John Henry Harris.  At this writing this compiler has not found a death record for her.  She died 4 May 1924 and had been living with another son Charlie Harris, a coal miner, in Logan County, West Virginia.



[i] Klaiber Cemetery has several alias names including Sexton, and  Hood.


[i] KY, Boyd dbk 25 page 513

[ii] Ashland Republican, 27 April 1893


[i] KY, Boyd tax fhl 008188344

[ii] KY, Boyd dbk 19 page 438


[i] KY, Greenup  Marriage , page 57.  The clerk spelled Matilda’s last name as   Kesee. Joseph Arthur was bondsman.

[ii] In published Greenup  Marriage records & History of Greenup County by Biggs she is referenced as Rebecca Farmer d/o John Currant

[iii] OH, Lawrence, page 80 #483




21 August 2023

Thomas J. Maddox & son Arlie Maddox: Whispers from the Grave; Klaiber Cemetery, Boyd County, Kentucky

 

Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber 2023

    



Thomas J. Maddox was born 13 September 1895 in Elliott County, Kentucky, son of Charles and Margaret Creech Maddox.  He and his father were both farmers.  He had light brown hair and blue eyes[i] and possibly had some hearing difficulties according to his draft card.

He married Matilda Stephens about 1916. Tilda was also from Elliott County. Sadly, the Elliott County courthouse had a fire on 19 December 1957 which destroyed some records including early marriages.  Thomas and Matilda had seven children between 1917 and 1929.  Matilda died 25 June 1929[ii] in Elliott County from complications of childbirth of their last child. According to birth records, a son, Thomas[iii] named for his father was born 24 June 1929.  According to a death certificate a daughter, unnamed, was born stillborn on the same date[iv].  Both the infant and Matilda (Tilda) were buried in Stephens Cemetery.  The cemetery was also called Maddox Cemetery by some.   The cemetery is said to be up a hollow northwest of Wallowhole School and southeast of Little Fork Road, Elliott County, Kentucky.[v]   The family resided on Little Fork, Blaine Trace Road.

The following year (1930) Thomas J. Maddox was 34 with children living with his in-laws Daniel and Phoebe Stephens.  He married 2nd to Amanda Marie Lucas Burke.  Amanda Marie Lucas was born 28 October 1908 in Boyd County, daughter of Frank Kane Lucas and Nancy Ann Perkins. Amanda was also widowed, having married Herman Burke who died 9 March 1930[vi].  She had one daughter Wanda Louise Burke born in 1927.  By the time the 1930 census was taken she was noted as a widow and living with her parents.

The family settled on Durbin Road in Boyd County.  Thomas J. Maddox was one of many that got a job doing road work for the WPA.  The WPA (Work Progress Administration) used crushed rock from a quarry across the road from Klaiber Cemetery during this time frame.  By World War II Thoma’ hair had turned gray according to the draft taken in 1941.

Son, Arlie Maddox, born 18 May 1921[vii], in Elliott County, to Thomas and wife Tilda, was working on the family farm in 1940 and 1941 when he applied for his military draft card.  Like his father he was of slim build with blue eyes and had red hair.

By 1950 Thomas and Amanda were living at Denton (leaving Bolts Fork going over the hill) in Carter County with Frank and Nancy Lucas.  This would be over the southern ridge of Klaiber Cemetery and a bit to the west.  Son, Arlie, had moved to Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio and married Betty Lou Jones 16 June 1950. This was his first marriage and her second.  Betty Lou was sister to Lottie Jones who married Norman Franklin Lucas. They were children of John and Goldie Ellen Walker Jones.

Thomas J. Maddox died 1 August 1960 in Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio at the age of sixty-four. He was brought back to Klaiber Cemetery for burial next to Amanda Lucas Burke Lucas parents and grandparents.

Arlie Maddox and Betty Lou Sparkman Maddox were divorced 20 July 1977 in Franklin County, Ohio.  He died 14 August 1978, at Riverside Hospital, and was brought back for burial in Klaiber Cemetery, Boyd County, Kentucky beside his father.

 



 His step mother, Amanda Marie Lucas Maddox died 17 October 1994,  at their home on Durbin Road, in Boyd County.  She also is buried in Klaiber Cemetery.



[i] WWI Military draft card, Elliott County

[ii] KY death vital cert 16443

[iii] KY Birth vol  051 cert 25032

[iv] KY Vital death cert 16444

[v] http://kykinfolk.com/elliott/ellcem05.htm

[vi] He is buried in the Elijah Rice Cemetery, Lawrence County, KY

[vii] KY Birth index cert 29497


17 August 2023

Virginia Myrtle Lucas: Whispers from the Grave; Klaiber Cemetery, Boyd County, Kentucky

 

Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber 2023


As I have said so many times our family lives on in our memories and our littlest angels should never be forgotten.  Virginia Myrtle Lucas was born 24 September 1924, and according to her death certificate the birth took place in Carter County, Kentucky. To date this compiler has not found an official birth record in Kentucky, Ohio or West Virginia.

Virginia Myrtle Lucas died in White Cross Hospital, Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio 29 July 1926[i].  White Cross had converted affiliation with the Protestant Hospital Association to the Ohio Methodist Episcopal Conference in 1922. 

The cause of death is cited as cholera infantum.  Cholera is an infectious disease caused by bacteria. A child could get cholera by eating food or drinking water contaminated with bacteria.  Combined with Infantum, a viral disease of infants and young children, it is deadly causing speedy wasting.

Virginia was the daughter of Reuben Harrison Lucas born 9 January 1889 in Carter County and wife Cora Combs.  She was the granddaughter of Henry Kane Lucas, Lucinda Sexton Lucas, John “Jack Combs and Martha J. Cotton.

Virginia had at least three siblings: John D., Lelia and Lewis, all born in Kentucky.  Her parents married 27 August 1910 in Boyd County, Kentucky[ii] and by 1920 are listed in Cabin Creek, Kanawha County, West Virginia where Reuben was trying his hand at mining.

The 1927 City Directory for Columbus, Franklin County, shows Reuben, laborer, and Cora residing at 1190 St. Clair Avenue.  This is the same address given on Virginia Myrtle’s death certificate.  I find there is often a lag time in posting in city directories and they did not appear in the 1926 edition.  By 1928 only Cora is listed working as a waitress.  I speculate that Reuben had returned to Cabin Creek, as they appear on the 1930 census in Burnwell, West Virginia where, once again “Rube” is mining, working for Case Mining Company. 

Virginia’s father, Reuben Harrison Lucas died 20 January 1972 in Kanawha County, West Virginia and buried in Montgomery Memorial Park at London, Kanawha County, West Virginia.   Montgomery Memorial Park is an active, perpetual care cemetery.   In 1971,  Cora was living in Rand, Kanawha County[iii] and died July 1980, according to the Social Security Death Index.

 

 

 



[i] OH, Franklin d cert 44135

[ii] KY, Boyd M bk 32A p 97

[iii] Charleston Gazette 4 Mar 1971 obit of Stephen Franklin Combs


11 August 2023

Henry Kane Lucas and wife Lucinda Sexton: Whispers from the Grave; Klaiber Cemetery, Boyd County, Kentucky

 

Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber 2023

  





Henry Kane Lucas was born 6 December 1846 in Letcher County, Kentucky to Emanuel “Todd” Lucas and wife Charlotte “Lottie” Moore.   He grew up in Letcher County. Henry and his father, Emanuel migrated and first appear on the 1867 Carter County, Kentucky tax list[i].  Henry was just 21 and had no values while his father shows 100 acres still being taxed in Letcher County.

Henry Kate Lucas met Lucinda “Cinda” Sexton about this time.  Lucinda was born in 1850 in Kentucky. By 1860 she is living in the household of Fletcher Burton along with mother Hulda Sexton[ii] and siblings Bartlett Hasker, Kate and Helen, Sexton.   The next entry in the 1860 census is for the Henry Powell Sexton family.

Family history states that Lucinda was a “woods colt” between Hulda Sexton and James Henderson.  Lucinda’s death certificate also states her father was James Henderson.  The term “woods colt” feels so much freer and nicer than the harsh word illegitimate that society used to put on children. 

There are so many reasons that marriage records may not be located easily.  Marriages are filed by county, not by state, and up until a few years ago we did not have digitized indices, which can still be incomplete or names mis-spelled.  If a minister did not file at the local court house, then there is no record. If the bride and groom slipped across a state line it is harder to track the marriage.  In Virginia we now know that Walter Plecker, state registrar, campaigned to expunge ethnic marriages in Virginia. He even had a list of surnames including Sexton that were to be expunged.  Research shows he succeeded in his hateful quest. To date, we have not found a marriage record for Henry Kane Lucas and Lucinda Sexton, though the records in both Carter County and Boyd County seem very complete where they were living at that time.

Lucinda was seventeen in 1867, and as stated Henry twenty-one.  Their first child, Emily Alice Lucas (m. Frank Kelley) was born in 1868 in Carter County.    This compiler can identify and verify eleven children[iii] and with oral history the possibility of two other children.  Norman Lucas, grandson of Henry Kane Lucas, says two more sons are buried in Klaiber Cemetery, marked only by sunken field stones; Sherman and Taylor Lucas.  When the season is very dry the outline of both the graves is very visible. Both lay, in line with, and just to the south of Emily Alice Lucas Kelley’s headstone.  Norman and his wife usually placed a flower on each of the two graves when they visited. Neither of these boys appear in any census record for Henry Kane and Lucinda Sexton Lucas.    In December 1883, The Ashland Independent wrote the following: “Glenwood, died on the 15th after thirteen hours bleeding at the nose an eight-year-old son of Henry Lucas.”  Neither of these names appear with Henry Kane on the 1880 census.

For a while in their later years, Henry Kane Lucas and Lucinda lived with daughter Laura Ellen at Geigerville, Boyd County[iv].  Laura had married Reuben Biggs in April 1887, then widowed, had returned from Indiana after Biggs death.   Lucinda Sexton Lucas died 5 January 1931, at Denton, Carter County.[v]   Her death certificate was signed by Fred Tyree, a doctor who resided at Hitchens.    Lucinda was laid to rest in Klaiber Cemetery.

Henry Kane Lucas death followed on 2 June 1933 at Denton, Carter County.[vi]  On the 22nd of June 1933, son, Frank Kane Lucas, requested a deed from Henry Powell Sexton’s estate via son James McClelland Sexton for the plot in Klaiber Cemetery[vii].  The deed describes the cemetery  “known as the William Hood Cemetery” and is 50 feet in each direction.   The deed gives the family a right to and from the cemetery and strictly stated that the burials would not interfere with other grave sites.

In 2010 some stones were knocked over, by cattle, after someone left the gate open.  One of the stones was Henry and Lucinda’s.  With the help of neighbors we quickly got the stone remounted.






 




[i] KY, Carter, fhl 008337275

[ii] Hulda was the daughter of James Enoch Sexton and Permillia Sexton and granddaughter of Elisha and Tabitha Sexton.

[iii] Issues of HK & Lucinda: Emily Alice b 1868; Mary b 869; Laura Ellen 1870;  Perry Allen 1872; Eva 1874; John Dee 1876, Henry Denton 1879; Frank Kane 1885, Esau 1887 – possibly Sherman b unk and Taylor b. unk.

[iv] KY, Boyd 1930 census

[v] KY d cert 493, filed Denton, Carter Co.

[vi] KY d cert  13190 filed Denton, Carter Co.

[vii] KY Boyd dbk 314 p 165 not filed until 1955

09 August 2023

Charley Lucas: Whispers from the Grave; Klaiber Cemetery, Boyd County, Kentucky

 

Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber 2023



Charley Lucas was the son of John Dee Lucas and Dee’s second wife Hattie Gilley. 

Charley’s parents, John Dee and Hattie Gilley were married 12 May 1901 in Carter County, Kentucky.   John Dee Lucas was a coal miner and it appears that, during the first nine years of the marriage they moved around quite a bit.  Charley’s older sister, Louanna Lucas[i],  was born in Tennessee in 1902.  Charley was born 24 May 1905, once again back in Kentucky followed by sister Bertha[ii] who was born in 1909 in Indiana.  By 1910 Charley and his family were all residing with his grandparents, Henry Kane Lucas and wife Lucinda Sexton Lucas, on Straight Creek, in Carter County. 

Making a living at coal mining was a hard and lean way to earn a living.  Many of the miners in our area moved to other coal mining fields during their lives.  John Deed Lucas, was no exception.  After 1910 John Dee Lucas took his family to Cabin Creek, Kanawha County, West Virginia to work as a miner. 

Charley was only twenty-one when he was hurt in a mine accident.  He was working for Imperial Coal while residing at Burnwell, West Virginia.  The Imperial Colliery Company was founded at Burnwell in 1901.  During the 1920’s they had opened and closed several mines in the area.  According to Charley Lucas’ death certificate he was taken to General Hospital in Charleston where his left leg was amputated.

 

 



Charley Lucas died 7 August 1926[iv] from trauma of the amputation. Charley Lucas was brought back to Boyd County, Kentucky for burial on the 10th of August 1926. Charley was laid to rest near his grandparents, Henry Kane and Lucinda Sexton Lucas. Who ever made his tombstone added a date at the bottom of June 14th, 1958 which we will assume was when they finally marked the grave.  His father died in October 1956 while residing in Wheelersburg, Scioto County, Ohio.  His parents are both buried in White Chapel Memorial Gardens, in Barboursville, Cabell County, West Virginia.


[i] OH Vital Lou Anna Horner 4 Sep 1992, Portsmouth, Scioto OH

[ii] OH, Lawrence M to William Belcher 5 Jul 1946

[iii] https://www.liveauctioneers.com/price-result/imperial-coal-company-stock-with-mark-twain-provenance-144353/

[iv] WV Vital death cert 10885

07 August 2023

Frank Kane Lucas & wife Nancy Ann Perkins Lucas: Whispers from the Grave; Klaiber Cemetery, Boyd County, Kentucky

 Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber 2023



I wish to thank Dreama Calvo  donated  this picture of Frank Kane and Nancy Perkins Lucas. The picture is thought to be taken on their farm on Long Branch Road, just across the Boyd County line into Carter County, Kentucky.

 

Over the years we had visits with Norman Franklin Lucas and Lottie Marie Jones his wife. Many times we walked among those in Klaiber Cemetery, as Norman and Lottie told us stories.  Norman was one of thirteen children of Frank Kane Lucas and Nancy Ann Perkins, his wife. 

Norman’s father, Frank Kane Lucas was born 4 July 1885 in Boyd County, Kentucky the son of Henry Kane Lucas and Lucinda Sexton Lucas.  They lived on Garner as he was growing up. Farming was the primary source of income, and living off the land.

When Frank was twenty he married Nancy Ann Perkins, the daughter of James “Frank” Perkins and Martha J. Cotton.  Frank was deceased by the time they married and Nancy’s mother Martha J. had remarried to John “Jack” Combs.  Frank and Nancy married 17 January 1906 with the written permission of her mother, Mrs. Martha Combs, because she was only eighteen years and four days old.  Their marriage followed a miserable cold spell for the area, though a bit warmer and damp, everyone wore heavier coats.  Julina Sexton Klaiber, William Vincent Sexton and William’s wife, Elizabeth “Trudi” Enyart Sexton were witness.  They were married by J. W. Hedrick.

Tragedy struck after the birth of Carl Douglas Lucas who was born 10 January 1918 and died the 11th of September 1918 from gastro intestinal issues. His death certificate is filed for Carter County just across the line on Long Branch.  He was laid to rest in Klaiber Cemetery.



A daughter Martha Edith Lucas was born 23 June 1919 in Boyd County. Julina Sexton Klaiber kept a diary during this time frame and entered her death on 22 October 1923 but did not write down the heartbreaking details.   Little Martha was playing with matches and caught her clothing on fire.  She was buried in Klaiber Cemetery on the 24th.

 

 


 

Just one year before Martha’s death, Frank had purchased 22 acres on Garner Creek just over the Carter County line from his father and mother, Henry Kane Lucas[i]. Many of the farmers in our area made extra money by signing leases for oil and gas throughout the years and still do. It was an easy way to make some extra money when you owned the mineral rights to your property.  Frank had a lease, in Carter County, with Kentucky Fuel Gas Corporation.  These leases gave the company right of exploration and the possibility of sinking a well.  If the well produced the lease stipulated either royalties or the free use of gas.[ii]

In the late 1930’s Frank invested in 35+ acres along Williams Creek in Carter County[iii]. Williams Creek winds around to Glancy Fork and Denton. Long Branch Road extends, but dead ends, from Boyd County into Carter County. As I have stated many times, there was a horse path across the hill from Long Branch to Denton that was easily accessed. Frank’s World War II draft card, filed in Carter County, describes Frank as five feet ten inches tall, with brown eyes and black hair.  Farming had left him lean at 125 pounds.

Other children of Frank and Nancy that grew to adulthood but are buried in Klaiber Cemetery include Laura Jane born 3 September 1910 in Boyd County and married 20 December 1929 Marion Emerald Jarvis.  She died 31 December 1942 in Columbus, Ohio and was brought back to Klaiber Cemetery for burial. Marion remarried in 1943 Mary Brennan.  When he died 6 March 1968 he was buried in Klaiber Cemetery, as well.

Bessie Juanita Lucas was born 4 June 1926, never married and lived most of her life on Garner.  She moved to Columbus in 1965 and died there 25 November 1966 and was brought back to Garner for burial[iv].


Bessie Juanita’s father Frank Kane Lucas died 23 December 1966 after an extended illness, after farming most of his life. Nancy lived exactly one month and died 23 January 1967 from a heart attack. Both are laid to rest in Klaiber Cemetery.

 


 



Their son Ralph Clifton Lucas born 14 March 1914, married 22 October 1938 Elizabeth Alexander.  He was a member of Coalton Community Church and had worked for Jeffery Manufacturing Company in Columbus, Ohio. Ralph died 16 July 1977, Rush, Kentucky, of a heart attack. He was buried in Klaiber cemetery 18 July 1977.  His widow Elizabeth died 27 November 1989 in Portsmouth, Scioto County, Ohio and was brought back to Klaiber Cemetery for burial on the 30th.

Frank and Nancy’s daughter Amanda Marie born 28 October 1908, had two marriages. She married Herman Burke who died in 1930 and is buried in Rice Cemetery, Lawrence County, Kentucky.  Amanda married second Thomas J. Maddox.  Thomas was born 13 September 1895 in Elliott County, Kentucky died in 1960 in Columbus, Ohio. He was brought back for burial in Klaiber Cemetery. Amanda died 17 October 1994 and is buried in Klaiber Cemetery.

Other children of Frank and Nancy include Florence Lucas McKnight buried in Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio; Nora (no further info.); Lenora Irene Lucas Smith died Sandusky, OH; Hazel Lucille Lucas Davis died Greenup Co., KY and is buried White Chapel in Barboursville, Cabell, WV: Norman Franklin Lucas buried in Columbus, Franklin County, OH; Ruth Evelyn Lucas Caudill buried Franklin County, OH; Raymond Lucas buried Columbus, OH.

 



[i] Ky, Carter deed book 39 page 285

[ii] KY, Carter Deed book 49-272 release of lease  4-3-1928

[iii] KY, Carter deed book 58 p 603,

[iv] Daily Independent Nov 1966