Showing posts with label Huntington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Huntington. Show all posts

07 December 2023

Inez (Ines) Lorenza Jordan Workman: Whispers from the Grave; Klaiber Cemetery, Boyd County, Kentucky

 

Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber 2023

 


During the year I have highlighted some of the burials in Klaiber Cemetery in this series.  The cemetery has listings on find-a-grave however the original submitter in charge of those memorial entries is deceased and modification of his entries has been difficult.  Klaiber cemetery has more than its share of unmarked graves or simple field stones.  The use of various names of the cemetery during different time frames has sometimes made it difficult to determine where a person was laid to rest.  The Kentucky Historical Society, tried to give cemeteries throughout Kentucky a definite name during a 1970’s project.  It fell on deaf ears for locals who, when giving information for an obituary call a family cemetery by a name that may or may not be correct.

When I became a trustee of Klaiber Cemetery almost 30 years ago I was told that a grandchild of Inez Workman was buried at her feet.  The informant said they thought it was the child of Inez’s son Bellvard.  Extensive research on her family shows that the grandson was in fact the son of William Robert and Francis Holley Workman.

Inez Lorenza Jordan was born 21 April 1900, the daughter of George Washington and Mary Jane Perkins Jordan.  Inez married Lindsey Mansfield Workman 11 July 1918 in Boyd County, Kentucky when she was seventeen.   The family had three known children: Bellvard Rothland Workman, William Robert Workman and Ethel Marie Workman.

By 1930 the family had settled in Huntington, Cabell County, Kentucky where Lindsey worked at the Nickel Plant.  Inez had a brain hemorrhage and died 13 October 1933.  The death certificate was recorded in Boyd County, Kentucky with the informant her husband giving his address as Gyandotte, West Virginia.  Kilgore and Collier Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements and according to the death certificate burial was in Sexton Cemetery.  As stated before Sexton Cemetery should not be confused with Sexton Cemetery on Pigeon Roost, this county.  Sexton was an aka for Klaiber Cemetery located on Long Branch, Garner, Boyd County, Kentucky.

Inez’ son William Robert Workman (born 22 July 1921 in Boyd County, Kentucky) married Francis Holley 24 December 1938 in Cabell County, West Virginia.  On 4 Feb 1941 the couple had a son born in Huntington prematurely.  The infant was brought back to Garner for burial. The West Virginia Department of Health Death Certificate states “Sexton Cemetery.”   Once again the alias was used for what is now registered as Klaiber Cemetery with the state of Kentucky.

Wishing all my readers a blessed holiday season and during these trying times prayers for peace. 

 


20 November 2010

Don't Drink The Water!

compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber
November 2010




My email has been flooded since writing "Vomiting Lizards." Many told of family tales of other unusual items eaten. One suggested that Uncle Billy Taylor may have eaten lizard eggs swallowing them whole and then they hatched.

I must confess I have had a history with the lizards of Eastern Kentucky. Most of Kentucky has skinks and blue tailed fence lizards. They scamper unharmed, in the warmth of the sun, along our log home porch and flower beds.

Friends and family enjoy telling of the day I disrobed in front of my son because something was in my pants. Once I got over the panic and found out it was an innocent lizard I calmed enough to let him get back to nature. I am sure he was not happy either having traveled up my leg in unfamiliar terrain. For several years I received gifts of shirts and even socks with lizard motif.

None the less the story of Uncle Billy Taylor seemed very unusual to me. Then along with the other emails I heard from Archivist Steve Green. Steve and I have corresponded for several years on matters involving Eastern Kentucky history and genealogy. He has intrigued and stimulated me about more than one subject. So it should come as no surprise that he was able to supply me with pages of similar stories involving illness and even death by lizard.

With so many available historical newspapers online the task of coordinating articles has become much easier for researchers. Steve submitted seventeen articles between 1884 and 1910 with incidences from Ohio, Indiana, Pennsylvania and of course Kentucky.

Several of the articles indicated that drinking spring water was the cause of lizards in their stomachs. In that case the articles should have referenced salamanders also found in Eastern Kentucky. Salamanders are a joy to catch when you go "creekin" here in my beloved homeland.

The Stanford Semi-Weekly Interior Journal out of Central Kentucky reported, 20 November 1896, that Julia Parsons, a young girl of Union County, swallowed a lizard while drinking water from a spring. She died in horrible agony the following day.

The Richmond Climax reported August 15, 1900 from an article in the Mt. Sterling Gazette that Willie Farley, of Moreland, [Lincoln County] Kentucky, age six, coughed up a full grown lizard about seven inches in length. The boy was reported to have swallowed the lizard while drinking water and had been in his stomach for some time.

Salamanders are known to rejuvenate body parts after accidents -super regeneration- and scientists have been doing cell studies for years. Answers.com says they have poisonous enzymes in their fangs that can "eat away your insides. Nothing to crazy though." As urban legends go even Snoops.com has a link about eating salamanders.

The water in the well on our farm in Eastern Kentucky is crystal clear and icy cold. The well has served generations of family and friends. While we now have another pumped well and even utilize city water, there is nothing like plunging that stainless bucket down and pulling the water up link by link and drinking from the dipper.

Appalachian genealogy and history is unlike any other in our country and the area is flooded with folklore and old beliefs. The family swears that when Jesse James and his gang robbed the Bank of Huntington, Jesse stopped at our farm and drank from the well commenting that it was the "best water I ever tasted." Some family members declare it was "written up" in a Huntington paper. I have followed the supposed path of the gang members and can't envision they were even close to our farm let alone the well behind the mansion house. I have searched the Huntington [W.VA.] news articles without success. But it is a good story. And wouldn't it been most beneficial for the posse if Jesse had drank a lizard!