Showing posts with label Stephens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephens. Show all posts

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


15 June 2023

Fleming Jordan; George Washington & Mary Jane Perkins Jordan; Ira Vernon Jordan: Whispers from the Grave; Klaiber Cemetery, Boyd County, Kentucky

 


Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber 2023

 

Klaiber Cemetery is not without its share of mysteries and possibilities.  I first heard about a tombstone of Civil War Veteran Fleming Jordan from Evelyn Scyphers Jackson.  She even wrote about it in her Daily Independent Column called Reflections.[i] Jackson stated that the stone had been discovered in 1970 on Davis Branch, while a neighbor thought the stone had never been placed but was to go to Klaiber Cemetery on Big Garner.

Thinking someone might have ordered a military stone, I did a U.S .headstone search for military service without success.  In April 1999, I called Mrs. Walter Holbrook, owner of the property where Jackson said they discovered the stone.  Mrs. Holbrook said that Jackson had come out and she vaguely remembered there was a stone.  Mrs. Holbrook went on to say that her neighbor was getting older and may have just remembered there were Jordan’s in Klaiber Cemetery. “We decided a long time ago it didn’t belong there either…we did know where the stone is but honestly don’t any more…”

Holbrook’s neighbor was correct about one thing – there is a connection to Klaiber Cemetery.  Fleming Jordan’s son, George Washington Jordan, daughter-in-law Mary Jane Perkins Jordan and grandson Ira Vernon Jordan are all in Klaiber Cemetery.  Is Fleming Jordan at rest with them?

Fleming “Flem” Jordan was born February 1846, the son of John Jordan.  He grew up in Lawrence County, Kentucky and during the Civil War mustered into Company B of the 14th Kentucky Infantry. After his service Fleming married 20 August 1865, Louisa Prince, in Lawrence County, Kentucky.  They lived for some time on Twin Branch in Lawrence County and were the parents of six known children.  He filed for a pension 8 July 1879 in Lawrence County[ii] By 1900 Fleming was widowed, living in the Willard area of Carter County, while son George Washington Fleming and family were residing on the East Fork, in the Bolts Fork/ Big Garner area of Boyd County. 

George Washington Jordan was born 28 April 1873, in Lawrence County, Kentucky, son of Fleming and Louisa Jordan.  Like his father, records describe him as short with light hair.  Civil War enrollment records for his father described Fleming at only five feet 3 inches tall.  The World War I draft card for George Washington Jordan does not give exact height only that he was “short.”

George married Mary Jane Perkins, daughter of James “Frank” and Martha J. Cotton Perkins in 1893[iii].  The Jordan’s had nine known children at this writing.  By 1920 the family resided on Garner in Boyd County next to the Workman family.  Among the children, Ira, only sixteen according to census[iv], was already mining for a living.

By the late 1920’s the Jordan’s moved to Guyandotte, Cabell County, West Virginia, where George gave his occupation as carpenter.  According to George Washington Jordan’s death certificate he became paralyzed in March 1929.[v]   By 1930 they were residing with son James Robert Jordan[vi] and his large family. When George died 20 April 1930 the doctor noted that he had been bedfast for six months.  The certificate also states that burial would be in Sexton Cemetery.   The name of the cemetery varied but by 1930 Julina Sexton Klaiber and James Matthew Klaiber were the owners of the land surrounding the designated burial ground. A handmade marker was placed at the grave in Klaiber Cemetery.  a

 

 



 

Son, Ira Vernon Jordan’s death, “carved in stone,” is 27 April 1933. But as I have found with other handmade stones in Klaiber cemetery there are differences in the official record.  In 1930 Ira “Vernon” was an inmate in the Spencer State Hospital in Roane County, West Virginia.  He appears both on the census for the hospital as well as residing on Bellevue Road in Huntington along with wife Lula and two daughters.   His death certificate is dated 27 April 1934.  Dr. T. R. Biggs wrote that he had attended him from March 1930 until his death 27 April 1934. The cause of his death was pulmonary tuberculosis with contributory dementia praecox catatonic type.  According to the death certificate he was married and his usual place of residence was Bellevue Road, Huntington[vii]

Ira Vernon Jordan married Lula Jane Stephens sometime between 1920 and 1927.

The 1930 Huntington City Directory shows Vernon Jordan and wife “Lola” living on Bellevue Road, He is a laborer. The 1932 Huntington City Directory shows Vernon Jordan and wife “Lula” on Bellevue Road.  Ira Vernon Jordan’s mother also resides on Bellevue Road the same year.  Ira Vernon Jordan was laid to rest in Klaiber Cemetery (aka Sexton Cemetery) on 29 April 1934.



The widow, Lula Jane Stephens[viii] remarried 6 April 1935 in Cabell County to Finnie Robertson. By 1940 Ira and Lula’s  two girls utilized their step father’s surname.  Lula Jane Stephens Jordan Robertson died in March 1981 and is buried in Mason County, West Virginia.

George Washington Jordan’s widow, Mary Jane Perkins Jordan, mother of Ira Vernon Jordan, continued to live in Cabell County.  In 1930 she is living with son James Robert Jordan, on Bellevue Road in Huntington.  Mary died 24 April 1936[ix] in Huntington and was brought back to Klaiber Cemetery for burial, as well.  Her stone was designed and consistent with the other members of this branch of the Jordan family.





[i] Daily Independent, 16 Jun 1977

[ii]Fold3, Pension index,  Cert 296736 664518

[iii] 1900 census states married 7 years. No official m has been located at this writing.

[iv] Tombstone birth would make him 19

[v] WV, Cabell cert 4558

[vi] James Robert Jordan married Sarah B Stevens d/o Sam and Nell Kilgore Stevens  13 March 1914 in Boyd County, KY

[vii] WV Vital Roane Co cert 5310, 1934

[viii] In 1910 Lula and family are living on Clay Jack in Boyd County. By  1920 Lula J Stephen is 16 living with her parents Daniel and Ellen Colegrove Stephens on East Fork in Lawrence County, KY. Daniel Stephens married Ellen Colegrove 29 Oct 1892 in Lawrence County, KY

[ix] WV D cert 5310

19 August 2010

Name That Cemetery!

compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber August 2010

No this isn't a quizz show. I had a call from California and the caller was confused by the names of the cemeteries in Boyd County, Kentucky.

The caller was working on a Stephens family which means she also had to look at Stevens spellings. She had a death certificate for a Stephens showing one of her ancestors in Stevens Graveyard but when she utilized the Boyd County Master Cemetery Database it stated he was in Stevens/Marcum Cemetery. When she looked at the Boyd County, Kentucky Cemeteries Location Guide she found four cemetery listings utilizing both spellings at different locations. Could "the cemetery lady" please help her?

Working with genealogy every day it is easy to assume that everyone knows genealogical abbreviations and lingo. Working with the Boyd County Cemetery Master Database is also easy interpretation for those of us that utilize it every day. There is a nice introduction on the history of the database in the Location Guide. Since one file is .pdf and the other a searchable dbase not every online user gets to the introduction.

Cemeteries have a history of changing names with land ownership, not just here in Eastern Kentucky but across our nation. A good example is the history of our own Klaiber Cemetery which has had at least four different names over the years & geological survey maps incorrectly spelled it Clyber. Coroners and undertakers many times either incorrectly spelled the cemetery name or named the cemetery after the person being buried there compounding the name problem.

Thus when the Kentucky Historical Society Cemetery Grant began in 1968, volunteers needed to be very careful when submitting data, especially since there may be more than one cemetery with the same name in any given county. The volunteers needed to distinguish any two with the same name. KHS required that each cemetery have a name and some cemeteries were unnamed. It was up to the volunteers to provide a name for each cemetery while distinguishing them individually.

KHS required latitude and longitude as the only form of direction. This only added to the problems. First, unlike today, only a few professionals had anything like a GPS with them and secondly the volunteers had to manually figure the coordinates which left room for error [we found one directional placing the cemetery in the Ohio River]. The KHS form did not give route numbers.

The reality of the KHS Grant program was that it failed on several levels and was a huge success at the same time. Yes I know that statement does not seem to make sense. So let me explain. First it failed on the state level simply because early computers could not handle all the data from all the counties. Next because of computer limitations each cemetery was assigned a number instead of utilizing the assigned names causing even more confusion. Thus the failure. But the grant required that a copy of the typed material be left in each county and that was and is a huge success.

The more I worked with my beloved Boyd County cemeteries the more I became aware of the "name game" and all the limitations it caused for researchers. I began keeping a notebook with notations on each cemetery which developed into The Boyd County, Kentucky Cemeteries Location Guide. Far from a publication, it is simply a collection of historical notations and directions to cemeteries within the county. Because of the various name changes or "AKA" [also know as] each entry is cross referenced.

As my notes on cemetery names grew so did my notebooks with information on who was buried in each. I collected the KHS typed forms and then compared them with the available handwritten entries that, coordinator volunteer, Evelyn Jackson kept for Boyd County. A few of the readings never made it KHS. It became apparent that a master index for Boyd County was a must and new computer technology allowed me to develop a template.

When creating the columns I knew instantly that the KHS numbering system did not work and a column would have to allow for the cemetery name. With the "name game" I soon realized the column needed to be large enough to include some description. Thus we have "Stevens on Durbin", "Stevens/Marcum", "Stevens, Otis" and simply Stevens. If you look in the Location guide you will get directions and information on each. Stevens/Marcum has an AKA Marcum and is cross referenced in the guide as Marcum because some death certificates listed it as Marcum Cemetery.

With the template in place our newly created "Boyd County Master Cemetery Database" was on the way. A column for the source was marked KHS as all the typed grant forms were entered. Another column tells the viewer the year the entry was created. When step #1 was completed Jackson's hand written notations were added with any entries that had not made it to KHS. The source column is marked ESJ telling the reader that it was from her files.

Step #3 was the addition of any older readings that I had found scattered throughout publications and in the vertical files. If an entry differed it was added to the database.

Step #4 was the addition of entries from death certificates 1911 - 1916. The source column then says Dcert. By adding these we know of people that are buried in unmarked graves.

The database at this point still had and has limitations. We knew that not all Ashland Cemetery was in the KHS readings nor did we have Rose Hill entries completed from a separate book. The older entries from Rose Hill have now been completed thanks to Jim Kettel and Ashland Cemetery has supplied the library with additional information which is online as well. Still far from complete the Master database continued and continues to grow.

Step #5 developed with the creation of the Boyd County Fiscal Court Cemetery Board. Again new technology made "reading" a cemetery a thing of the past and "digitizing" the cemetery the new lingo. Joyce Whitlock and I set out on a two year journey across Boyd County to photograph tombstones. Once the tombstone was uploaded to the computer, a split screen view of the actual stone allowed less mistakes in entries into the dbase. While a majority of the cemeteries are digitized it is still an ongoing process. The digitized photographs are available at the Boyd County Public Library.

We have been working with the Boyd County PVA office who is also digitally mapping the county and the cemeteries. During one of our first meetings I asked about a particular cemetery and was told since they did not have the name they just called it whatever came "closest to the location." Oh the haunting "name game" again. The PVA office now utilizes the Location Guide and we hopefully have resolved creating yet another "AKA."

The database has proven to be extremely beneficial for researchers as it continues to grow. It has answered some interesting questions over the past few years. In one example we knew from the KHS reading that a stone existed in 1977 but was not standing when digitized for the followup a couple of years ago. By following research leads with help from the database we were able to determine when the grave and stone had been moved and where it now is.

In the case of the caller from California she was able to determine gps and driving directions to Stevens/Marcum Cemetery. She quickly had the site up on Google Maps and now knows where her ancestor is interred.

The database entry shows that it was from the KHS reading and in the comments line was typed "unmarked." Since no additional comments or entries were made when we digitized the cemetery in 2005 no stone was located at that time either. Additionally the caller says she has the death certificate and an obituary stating that her ancestor is buried next to his wife. That information adds another unmarked burial in Stevens/Marcum Cemetery.

Thanks to the collective efforts of the Boyd County Fiscal Court Cemetery Board, the cemeteries of Boyd County now have road signs giving an added aide for drivers to locate those tucked in the foliage on the hill and hopefully solidifying the question of the name of each cemetery in our county.

It has been an honor to share the database template with our neighboring Greenup County. The template is designed so that other counties with data can be added or merged with Boyd County. The dream of the original KHS project so many years ago has become a local reality. Greenup County and Carter County all have cemetery road signs as well. Seeing the road signs makes me hope that the "name game" is no longer like a quizz show.