Showing posts with label Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Williams. Show all posts

18 June 2020

Adams Family Heritage From Fluvanna County, Virginia to Lawrence County, Ohio


Adams Family Heritage
From Fluvanna County, Virginia to Lawrence County, Ohio
By Teresa Martin Klaiber 2020


 Solomon Adams[i] was born 04 May 1788 in Fluvanna County, Virginia,  [ii]  the son of Robert and Lucy Williams  Adams.

Solomon’s father, Robert, was born 9 May 1757, in Northum Parish of Goochland, British America. [iii] The Rev. William Douglas served the Parish from 1750.  Robert’s birth and baptism were duly recorded and appear in the Douglas Register.  Goochland stretched to the Blue Ridge Mountains along both sides of the James River and encompassed other later formed counties including Albemarle and Fluvanna.  The Parish was north of the James River.  The bounds of St. James Northam have not been altered since 1744. 

Robert Adams served during the Revolutionary War, having joined, February 1776, Captain Matthew Jouett’s Company (of Albemarle County[iv]) of the 7th Virginia Regiment under Colonel Alexander McClenachan.  He was at the Battle of Germantown 4 October 1777. While Robert’s pension records do not cite being at the Battle of Brandywine, Jouett was mortally wounded there.  History tells us that the Army marched into Valley Forge December 19th.  Washington, himself described it as “a dreary kind of place and uncomfortably provided.”[v]  Their clothing and shoes were in tatters.  Robert Adams was discharged from service, at Valley Forge, in February 1778.[vi]    This compiler visited Valley Forge, during springtime, for an SAR ceremony many years ago.  Even with a burst of flowers and spring there was a nasty chill in the air.  February, with little food and little shelter, would be brutal.

Returning from service Robert and Lucy Williams married 20th April 1778 at St. James, Northum Parish, Goochland County. The marriage bond, signed by John Graves , identifies Robert as the son of “James of Albemarle County.”  Lucy Williams is identified as the daughter of Philip Williams in the same record. The Rev. William Douglas served the Parish from 1750. 

Solomon Adams, the first  born child of Robert and Lucy, was only one when his grandfather, James Adams[vii] died in Fluvanna County.[viii]  His father Robert and uncle Thomas Adams were executors of the estate which was not finalized until 1789.[ix]  James Adams left his son Robert two negroes, namely Sook and Harry along with 200 acres that James quoted Robert was residing on.  James and wife Cecily had a total of twelve children.  James left four negroes named: Sam, Amy, Frank and Nan to his wife Cecily along with a feather bed, furniture, ten head of cattle and fifteen head of hogs.  To son Charles he left the land he then lived on and negroes Will and Tony.  He gave land to his other sons (including Thomas),  as well as slaves . Each of his daughters received slaves.[x] As I write this, in 2020, there is civil unrest, as well as a pandemic in the United States.  There is an ugly side to history but to leave it out of a narrative, or totally ignore it is just as wrong as the actions of the times.  We should learn from the past.  While Robert fought for America’s freedom, he grew up in a time of slavery, not everyone got that freedom in America.  And while this author is a product of my ancestors, I do not condone that way of living, nor will I turn my head the other way, by pretending it did not exist.


When Solomon was five, his father Robert Adams  (September 1793 by recommendation of the Governor), became Captain of the 1st Battalion Militia in Fluvanna County. Solomon’s uncle Richard Adams was Robert’s  Lieutenant.  At the same time, uncle John Adams was an Ensign and Thomas Captain. Solomon grew up in the county.  The region has rocky, clear creeks and plenty of timber.  His father, Robert and Lucy Adams, were involved in many land transactions between 1795 and 1802. 


The family migrated to Ohio prior to 1810.  They traveled approximately 338 miles to the new destination. Solomon’s sister Elizabeth married William Ellis, February 1810, in Gallia County.  There is no indication that any slaves cited earlier in this narrative made the trip with them in any records reviewed by this compiler.

Brother Richard married Frances Murrel Creedle , 8 September 1817, in Lawrence County.  The county was in its infancy and Robert  became active in the community by being appointed as Clerk of Elections.  The new county had its first election April 7th, 1817.  Robert was  sixty years old, Solomon twenty nine.


Lawrence County, Ohio was formed in 1815 from Gallia and Scioto Counties and borders the Ohio River at the southern end of the state.  The first Court of Common Pleas was organized March 4, 1817.  Father, Robert, and brothers Phillip and Richard appear on the 1818 Union Township Tax list along with Solomon.  Solomon is noted as having one horse and two cows with a value of .50.

In May 1818 Solomon Adams would turn thirty years of age.  On April 15th, 1818 Solomon married Susanna Roberts Overstreet. They were married by Thomas Templeton, Jr. in Lawrence County, Ohio.  There is no evidence (to date) that Solomon was married prior to this marriage to Susanna.

The following year, 1819, Robert Adams filed for a military pension in Lawrence County, Ohio.  He gave his age as 62 years old stating that within his household was his wife [Lucy] and a granddaughter 11 years old [not named].  Continued documentation on August 9, 1820 stated that he is then 64 years old with no income, 4 small shoats, 1 plough, 2 old split bottom chairs, 1 iron pot broken, 2 glass bottles, and 1 set of knives and forks bought with pension money.  He concluded by saying that his infirmities were such as to prevent ½ days labor.  He is in reduced circumstances and stands in need of the assistance of his country for support. His pension was granted. [xi] While Adams certainly deserved his pension, this compiler finds that most, if not all that applied for pension stated that they were in reduced circumstances.

I am going to pause in my narrative for a moment.  I was raised in the 1950’s, when “ladies” wore gloves and hats to church and town. I even took etiquette and cotillion lessons.  Family information was, like money, not talked about.  And while divorce had been around longer than mamma even realized, it was a blemish that just was not discussed.  And heaven forbid it was certainly left out of any bible record, family history, or vanity genealogical book.

Solomon’s new wife, Susannah Roberts had married John Overstreet, 23 March 1808, in Bedford County, Virginia.  Philip Roberts was surety.[xii]  The Overstreet family appears in 1810 census records in Bedford County.  A very colorful tale, however not entirely accurate, unfolds According to The History of the Early Settlers of Sangamon County, Illinois…page 551:


John Overstreet…married in Cabell County, West Virginia to Susan Roberts. He became a soldier in war with England 1812. While in the army he heard that his wife had been killed by Indians and soon after as himself was captured by Indians. Not long after his capture the Indians were preparing to burn him alive and while doing so one of their numbered offered him such a gross insult that he knocked the sayer down and fell in the fire prepared to burn his victim. This act of brave daring in the face … inspired the others Indians with respect ...saved his life. He was next sold and taken to Canada where he fell into hands of white men...retained for a few years in rather easy restraint  by the time he gained liberty he had formed attachments and married there. One child was born and the wife and child died ...once more alone...he returned to Cabell County, Virginia...He paid his first visit to the old cabin where he had spent the years of early married life...knocked on door...and the wife of his youth stood before him...Having long before given him up for dead his sudden appearance in bodily form was more than she could bear and she sunk in a swoon. Mr. Overstreet soon discovered that she had another husband and when she revived the three held council. The two husbands agreed to leave it for her to say which...and that if he was rejected he would go away...she decided to retain her first love. The rejected husband true to his word bade them adieu...never heard of him again. Mr. and Mrs. Overstreet came to Sangamon in 1810 and settled not far from where Athens now stands...built a horse mill at Athens...trip to New Orleans...died in New Orleans in 1835...his widow died in Athens in 1869 in her 74th year. 
Cabell County, Virginia lays just across the Ohio River from Lawrence County, Ohio where Solomon Adams lived.  This compiler never finds a record of Adams being in Cabell, Virginia but does continue to appear on tax lists for Union Township, Lawrence County, Ohio. This compiler believes it is an error in the printed history. John Overstreet was the son of John Overstreet (born 1760), a Revolutionary Soldier, who was also at the battle of Brandywine and Germantown.  He lived in Lawrence County, Ohio where he filed for a pension in 1818. He later migrated to Illinois, as did his son.

This compiler is very grateful for all the clerks, who over the years have shown me consideration, when I visited and requested to search obsolete records.  Long Before any of the Lawrence Supreme Court Records were microfilmed I located the Journal entry and petition for divorce of Solomon Adams to Susanna Adams. [xiii] Solomon Beckley acted as solicitor for the complainant, November 24, 1827.  But the petition was not filed until the April Term 1828….Supreme Court of the state of Ohio holden in and for the county of Lawrence at the court house in Burlington on the 28 day of April 1828…be it remembered that on the 24th of November 1827 that the said complainant by…attorney filed in the clerk’s office…petition against the said defendant…orator Solomon Adams of said Lawrence County was lawfully joined in the bands of matrimony to his present wife Susanna on the 15th of April 1817 at said county from which time your orator has been a resident of said county and your orator further show’th unto your honor that the said Susanna at the time of her marriage with your orator as aforesaid has a former husband then living to wit John Overstreet…that after said marriage to wit on the (blank) day of July 1817 said Susanna left his  your orator bed and board without any just cause  …her first marriage …united herself with said John Overstreet and lived and cohabited with him and hath since lived and cohabited with him as his lawful wife. That after thus living in this county and cohabiting with said John… husband for the space of five years removed to some parts unknown and out of the state of Ohio and has remained and continued out of said state for the space of five years last past…said Susannah has been absent from your orator three years and upwards and has been guilty of adultery with said John Overstreet…that the marriage aforesaid…be annulled….

On the 14th of February 1828, the date scholars note St. Valentine celebrations as early as the 1400's, Solomon Adams married for the second time.    Rhoda Bagley and Solomon Adams  were married  in Lawrence County, Ohio.  Rhoda was born in 1810, the daughter of  John Bagley and  Rhoda Ranselear.  I will leave it to my readers to determine if they think the second marriage was legal since the divorce case was not heard and filed until April 1828.

Maybe understanding that six months later, 18 August 1827, Rhoda gives birth to a baby boy named John clarifies why they did not wait for the final decree. 

Solomon’s father Robert, with Lucy, appear on the 1820 census for Union Township, Lawrence County, Ohio.  By 1830 Lucy is no longer listed and assumed deceased. Robert’s death occurred 14 March 1839 in Lawrence County, Ohio at the age of 82.[xiv]  "Be it remembered that on this day in open court proof was made to the satisfaction of the court by the oaths of Richard Adams, Harrison Ellis and Caleb Wilshire that Robert Adams was a pensioner of the United States, that he was a resident of the county of Lawrence in the state of Ohio and died in the said county and state aforesaid in the year of our Lord 1839 in the fourteenth day of March. That he left children whose names are Solomon Adams, Richard Adams, Elizabeth Ellis and Nancy Wilshire...”


Solomon and Rhoda would have a total of thirteen children between 1827 and 1847 when Rhoda sadly died in childbirth. Both she and infant, according to family, are buried at Clarks Mill, Union Township, Lawrence County, Ohio.  Solomon continued to farm 40 acres in Union township. Solomon died 1 October 1856 and is said to be buried at Union Chapel.

The picture of Solomon and Rhoda Adams 7th child, Sarah Jane Adams Kilbourne, sometimes hung in my grandmother’s house as I grew up.  Sometimes I found it tucked away in the foyer closet.  Grandmother encouraged my love of history and genealogy.  She gave me the portrait many years ago and it now hangs in my own home (not in a closet).  I also realized that while she loved to write about the family, she never mentioned indiscretions or divorces.  Ladies just don’t do that.


Sarah Jane Adams Kilbourne original possession of compiler




.





[i] Solomon Adams (Robert, James, Robert³, William², Robert¹) 
[ii] : Family Bible Record of Adams Soloman family of Lawrence County, Ohio, Family Register of Solomon Adams & Rhoda Adams his wife (verifax copy: n.p., n.d.). handwritten sheets originally in possession of Clara Page Martin and given to granddaughter Teresa Martin Klaiber
[iii] Son of James and Cecily Ford Adams
[iv] Albemarle adjoins Fluvanna County and was formed from Albemarle in May 1777.
[vi] "S45175,'" Robert Adams, Revolutionary Pension, NARA.
[vii] Solomon, Robert, James, Robert, William, Robert Addams
[viii] Fluvanna County, Virginia, Order Books Page 65, Indenture bet Thos & Robert exec of James decd, ; LDS FHL 0031476, .
[ix] Fluvanna County, Virginia, Deeds, book 3 page 133, James Adams Estate to Peter Barnard, 1795; Courthouse, .
[x] Fluvanna County, Virginia, : Will book I, page 105 James Adams; Courthouse, .
[xi] "S45175,'" Robert Adams, Revolutionary Pension, NARA.
[xii] Virginia, Bedford, Marriage Bonds
[xiii] Ohio, Lawrence, Common Plea Ct., Supreme Court Journal 1-2
[xiv] Lawrence County, Ohio, Common Pleas Journals Volume J 3-4 page 456, May 14 term 1839, Robert Adams death, ; Courthouse, Ironton, Ohio

27 September 2011

The Williams House, Catlettsburg, Kentucky

compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber
September 2011

Much has been written about Mordecai Williams of Catlettsburg, Kentucky.  Williams was born 20 December 1835 in Greenup [now Boyd] County, Kentucky, the son of Marcus Lindsey and Elizabeth Williams.  A lengthy biography can be read in History of Kentucky and Kentuckians by E. Polk Johnson [1912], Volume III pp 1206-8.  The biography has been copied at several url's.  The original volume contains the following photograph:


Portrait from History of Kentucky & Kentuckians, Vol. III

His biography mentions  a "narrow escape from losing his life."  The biography tells of two burglars who entered his home, shooting him twice and escaping.  They were later captured and sent the penitentiary.

Articles of the incident appeared across the country in September 1903.   Most say there was only one burglar.  The Emporia Gazette in Kansas ran an article "Kentuckians Hot After a Man who Shot Up a colonel Contrary to Law."  The Atlanta, Georgia paper headline read: "Shot Down By A Burglar. Kentucky Colonel Is Desperately Wounded by Night Prowler.  But the most descriptive and closest article I found to home was in the Portsmouth Times several days after the incident on September 12th.

"USED SABRE - Honorable Mordecai Williams Chases a Bold Burglar - And is Shot Down by the Thief - Ashland Man in a Thrilling Midnight Encounter.
Mordecai Williams, one of the most prominent citizens of Eastern Kentucky, was shot through the chest by a burglar at his home in Normal, just north of Catlettsburg, Monday night. Mr. Williams was defending himself with an old sword, valued as a relic, when the burglar fired the shot.

Mr. Williams was awakened by his wife, who heard the burglar in the room.  He saw the intruder, and as there was no other weapon in the room he secured the sword and struck the intruder with it.  the burglar then fired, the bullet striking Mr. Williams near the heart and passing entirely through his body.

After he was shot, Mr. Williams did not fall but continued his pursuit of the burglar, wielding the old sword, and the latter was finally forced to jump from a second story window, without securing any booty.  A search was made for him after the alarm was given but he had disappeared.

Although the bullet passed entirely through Mr. Williams' body, coming out near the spine, no vital organs were hit and he may recover.  

Mordecai Williams is one of the most prominent and best known citizens of Northeastern Kentucky."

For the record Mordecai Williams did survive and lived twenty more years.  He died 17 May 1923 and is buried in what today is Williams Section of Golden Oaks in Boyd County, Kentucky.  It was known as Williams Cemetery and was up the hill behind the home referenced in the attack.  

His wife at the time of the attack was Penelope, "Neppie" the daughter of John P. Savage and Margaret Frizzell.   The Williams married 25 August 1875 after they were both widowed. Neppie died 23 January 1920 and is also in Williams Section of Golden Oaks. 

I chuckled a bit at a mis-spelling in the Atlanta paper.  That article stated that Sheriff John "Henne", with a posse was hunting a burglar.  It did go on to say that  Sheriff "Henne" was the son-in-law of Colonel Williams.    "Henne" is John Fisher Haney who married Ann Dickinson Williams.  The Haney family lived right next door to the Williams family.

The marriage of Haney to the colonel's daughter caused commotion.  The news reached Ironton and was posted in the paper there.  Haney was born February 1870 in Ohio.
"Ironton Weekly Register, August 26, 1893
Runaway Marriage. - An event occurred yesterday in Catlettsburg that has created considerable stir in social circles, being no less than the marriage of Miss Anna D. Williams to John Haney, of Normal. It is said that the young couple have been attached to each other for some time, but their marriage was opposed by the grandmother of the bride. The father accompanied them yesterday and the marriage was solemnized at Catlettsburg, by Rev. Mr. Carnahan. Mr. and Mrs. Haney left for Chicago after the ceremony and are now enjoying the sights at the World's Fair. - Ashland Signal"
Annie Williams Haney died in October 1901 of typhoid fever.  on 14 January 1904 John Fisher Haney married Gertrude Minor.

The Williams home was full of laughter  in June 1903 when the Haney's daughter Anna Williams Haney celebrated her 9th birthday at her grandparents.  It was such a big social event that the Catlettsburg Daily Press made note calling Mordecai's home simply the "Williams House."

Even as late as the 1990's when I first learned of the Klaiber connection to the home it was simply referred to as the "Williams House."

Three years before Mordecai's death, John Fisher Haney's father Joseph, who had been living with the Haney family at Normal, died in Boyd County.  John Fisher Haney died in August 1925 and was buried in Woodland Cemetery, Ironton, Lawrence County, Ohio.

During the early 1930's as people struggled with the Depression the James Matthew Klaiber family rented their own farm out on Big Garner and moved into the Williams home, renting from Gertrude Minor Haney.

The Klaiber family could make more money with this move during hard times.  James Matthew Klaiber plowed all the ground that now consists of Golden Oaks.    Son John Henry Klaiber drove a truck for the local feed company and helped his father farm.  In February 1931 they got a Federal Crop Mortgage for "all crops...now planted and growing...Boyd County...the farm of Mrs. John Haney located on the east end of Ashland near Catlettsburg...bounded on the north by school property...175 acres."  The Mortgage was filed by John Henry's sister Martha who worked as clerk at the Boyd County Courthouse in Catlettsburg.   The Klaiber family were able to return to their own farm by 1935.

John Fisher Haney's widow, Gertrude continued to live until 21 March 1970.  She also is resting in Woodland Cemetery, Ironton, Lawrence County, Ohio.

The William's House was still standing in October 1974 when Evelyn Jackson wrote an article in the Press Observer [vol. 1 #35, 31 Oct.] on the Williams genealogy. Today nothing of the home stands except a set of cement steps going up the side of the hill.














12 December 2010

Come All You Tender Hearted


compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber
December 2010




By now all my readers should be aware of my love of ballads and how they can be used in genealogy and history.

My families genealogy includes the sad story of Floyd Alson McCormack [1836-1906] and wife Francis Jane Ratliff McCormack's two daughters deaths in Carter County,Kentucky..

A few years ago a family cousin, Robert McCormack, asked if I knew of a ballad sang by the Stanly Brothers. I immediately sent him the copy from Ballad Makin in the Mountains of Kentucky by Jean Thomas. What is interesting about her publication is that she says the ballad "came to Jilson Setters' ears..." It did not say that Jilson Setters aka William Day was the author.

Over the years Robert has collected several versions of the ballad and now has a web page that is a true delight. Simply titled The Fire Tragedy, I am sure my readers will enjoy it.

As the snow storm moves into Eastern Kentucky, I am scanning McCormack items in my collection and refreshing my memory concerning the ballad. Among my items is a copy of the Carter County Herald, Olive Hill, Kentucky, dated 26 October 1922. The article is titled "A Sad Recollection."

This article has a few inconsistencies and states that Mrs. Francis McCormick was a widow residing in Flat Woods, Carter County and suffered from rheumatism. After putting her little girls to bed, she went to the neighbor's house to get some liniment and while there the house caught fire and burned. This article states the the affair happened in 1867.

The newspaper version follows:
Come all ye tender hearted
Your attention I will call;
I'll tell you how it started,
Come listen one and all.
On Wednesday night there was a light
Saw shining on the hill;
A mother ran with all her might,
While everything was still.
Two little girls had gone to bed,
While mother ached with pain;
"I'll get some liniment," she said,
"And soon return again."
Don't stay too long, dear mother,
For well be lonesome here,"
And then mother might have seen
Them drop a silent tear.
She went into a neighbor's house,
Some hundred yards away,
Twas there she sat and talked with them
Bud did not mean to stay.
They hear a noise life thunder
As the flames began to roar;
Ain't it an awful wonder
They never went to the door?
Time passed on much longer,
But still she did not go;
Ain't it an amazing wonder
The mother acted so?
When she started home again
Her house was in a flame;
She cried, "My babies, you're gone,
I am the one to blame."
She burst the door asunder
The flames rolled over her head.
She cried aloud, "No wonder."
She found her babies dead.
The little ones had gone to sleep
Before their mother came.
Oh how still they slept,
Wrapped in the red hot flame.
Their little bones lay on the ground,
They both lay face to face,
Their arms they were entwined around
Each other they did embrace.
Don't grieve for them, dear mother,
For they are now at res,
Ain't it an amazing wonder
How soon they both were blessed?
If they had said with you, ma,
Till they had both grown old,
They could not have purchased what they have
Though they had a world of gold.
We know they are gone from you, ma,
It's their eternal gain;
They're beyond the curtains of the sky
Where they'll never know no pain.
We know they're gone from you, ma;
God will it so to be;
Just put your trust in him, ma;
Your babes you soon shall see.

This version published in the Carter paper states that it was composed by M. J. Williams in 1888. The version published by Jean Thomas varies in many ways and never uses the word ain't or ma.

The story has some twists. In 1870 Francis was living in Greenup County, Kentucky working as a seamstress with her children and an Elizabeth Williams age 67 born in East Virginia. The little girls vary in ages from 8 years old to 6 months. Husband Floyd is not in the household. However he reappears in 1880 in Lawrence County living with a younger wife Martha [Haney]. Thus she was not a widow in 1870. Floyd did not die until 20 June 1906.

Looking for M. J. Williams who composed the ballad in 1888, I found Montraville J. Williams, the son of Jefferson Brooks Williams living next door to John Q. A. Davis, a violin and dulcimer maker in 1880 in Olive Hill, Carter County, Kentucky. Williams is 22 years old working on his fathers farm but was certainly influenced by John Q. A. Davis and his music.

Kentucky Vital records show that Montraville J. [spelled a variety of ways] was born 24 February 1858 in Smokey Valley, Carter County to Jefferson B. and Mary Griffith Williams.

By 1900 Montraville Williams is living with a sister's family and is selling organs. Montraville appears to have never married and is found in 1920 living as a boarder in Eagle, Carter County with no occupation, just two years prior to the writing of the article in the Carter County newspaper.

I was able to to locate the obituary of "Mont J." Williams published 17 January 1929 in the Carter Herald. With a special thanks to James Powers at the Boyd County Library, I did not have to make the drive on this snowy day to obtain the obit. We discussed what a wonderful genealogy find the obituary was because it lists when each of the siblings pre-deceased Montraville. Sadly the article does not state the one thing I had hoped - which was his occupation and involvement with music and musical instruments. According to the obituary Montraville J. Williams died 12 January 1929 and was buried at Globe, Kentucky.

Anyone with further information on any other ballads that M. J. Williams may have compiled is encouraged to contact me.


clip art by: www.clker.com