Before El Paso, there was Fabens

In genealogy, you start with what you know, working backwards in time from your most recent ancestors. That’s what I’m doing with the migrating Williams Family. We know Mom and Dad met and married in El Paso, but before that, the family headed by …

In genealogy, you start with what you know, working backwards in time from your most recent ancestors.  That’s what I’m doing with the migrating Williams Family.  We know Mom and Dad met and married in El Paso, but before that, the family headed by Jess C. Williams aka Popsy resided in Fabens, Texas.  Elizabeth [Mom] was ten, Louise was eight, and Jerry was only two when Popsy purchased the Fabens Waterworks in 1931. (1)  They lived there until 1939, the year Mom graduated from high school, a period roughly commensurate with the Depression. 

Fabens lies between El Paso and Sierra Blanca, so Uncle Jerry and I stopped there on our way to see cousin Tom D.  Continue reading “Before El Paso, there was Fabens”

El Paso Places

Just after I landed in El Paso last month (but after lunch, of course), my aunt and uncle took me on sightseeing tour — sort of Homes-of-the-Stars, the Williams Family version.Our first stop was Awbrey Road in the Lower Valley. This house, 147 Aw…

Just after I landed in El Paso last month (but after lunch, of course), my aunt and uncle took me on sightseeing tour — sort of Homes-of-the-Stars, the Williams Family version.

Our first stop was Awbrey Road in the Lower Valley.  This house, 147 Awbrey, was where our grandparents, Jess and Amy Williams (better known to us as Mopsy and Popsy), lived when Mom and Dad met and married in 1944 and where oldest sister spent her first few months. (1) Continue reading “El Paso Places”

Our Grandfather’s Grandfather – Confederate Casualty

[Notes: This is an adapted version of my October ProGen (online study group) homework – a formal research report for a client. In this case, I’m my own client, writing a report to the Williams file. I omitted the middle chunk of the assignment, th…

[Notes:  This is an adapted version of my October ProGen (online study group) homework – a formal research report for a client.  In this case, I’m my own client, writing a report to the Williams file.  I omitted the middle chunk of the assignment, the detailed findings – the lists of sources searched, but I left in the footnotes. In fact, I may change this blog’s tagline to “It’s about the footnotes.”  One more caveat:  this research, analysis, and report took way more than ten hours!]

Williams Report #1

31 October 2010

For:  Research File

Subject: Participation of ancestor Jesse G. Williams in the Civil War Continue reading “Our Grandfather’s Grandfather – Confederate Casualty”

We Owe Her So Much

That’s what Tom D Ellison said to me as he swept his arm towards the boxes holding the files of his sister, Julia Mae. And, indeed, my recent trip to Texas was motivated by the knowledge that Tom is now the caretaker of Julia Mae’s work. They were…

That’s what Tom D Ellison said to me as he swept his arm towards the boxes holding the files of his sister, Julia Mae.  And, indeed, my recent trip to Texas  was motivated by the knowledge that Tom is now the caretaker of Julia Mae’s work.  They were Mom’s first cousins and we were fully aware that Julia Mae was the Williams family historian and that she worked tirelessly to create the Hudspeth County Museum.  I don’t remember meeting her as a child, and, unfortunately, this trip was too late by seven years.  

But I was ever so grateful for her collection of Williams family documents, pictures, and obituaries (it would have taken years to gather those alone!)  My new portable scanner was abuzz with activity.  I don’t know enough yet about Julia Mae from those with whom she worked on history projects, but I do have a few pictures to share – one is among my favorite trip finds.  Continue reading “We Owe Her So Much”

Evidence Analysis or “What did I know and when did I know it?”

Before documenting my Texan discoveries, I’m backing up to set the stage. Below is a list of sources in hand before I departed; they are in the format I used for my September ProGen (online study group) evidence analysis homework. (1) Bear with me…

Before documenting my Texan discoveries,  I’m backing up to set the stage.  Below is a list of sources in hand before I departed; they are in the format I used for my September ProGen (online study group) evidence analysis homework.  (1)  

Bear with me for the brief genealogical introduction.  You might even enjoy it!

Continue reading “Evidence Analysis or “What did I know and when did I know it?””

Speechless

I’m rendered speechless at the moment. And that wouldn’t necessarily be a bad thing except that I’m trying to maintain a story-telling blog. I threw myself into genealogical education in the last ten months – completing the trifecta of SLIG, Samfo…

I’m rendered speechless at the moment.  And that wouldn’t necessarily be a bad thing except that I’m trying to maintain a story-telling blog.

I threw myself into genealogical education in the last ten months – completing the trifecta of SLIG, Samford, and NIGR in one year.  And in the last two weeks, did the same with on-site research – spending part of one week in western Pennsylvania researching Dad’s line and then spending most of last week in the El Paso, Texas, area researching Mom’s family.  To put it mildly, the combined trips were a study in contrasts. Continue reading “Speechless”

Happy Birthday, Mom!

Mom’s birthday celebrations didn’t typically reach epic proportions like Dad’s. For one thing, her October 4th birthday didn’t lend itself to leisurely summer reunions. And Dad didn’t organize us in quite the same way that Mom quarterbacked his bi…

Mom’s birthday celebrations didn’t typically reach epic proportions like Dad’s.  For one thing, her October 4th birthday didn’t lend itself to leisurely summer reunions.  And Dad didn’t organize us in quite the same way that Mom quarterbacked his birthday every July.  But that seemed to be OK with her. Continue reading “Happy Birthday, Mom!”

“Yes! I was a soldier in the civil war between the States….”

Thus begins a “simple statement of my ‘War Record'” penned by George Washington Walling, Sr. a few years before his death in 1916, at the request of his son Thomas Burrowes Walling. (1) This document is one piece of the Walling Papers, the discove…

Thus begins a “simple statement of my ‘War Record'” penned by George Washington Walling, Sr. a few years before his death in 1916, at the request of his son Thomas Burrowes Walling. (1)

This document is one piece of the Walling Papers, the discovery that I wrote about here. Below is the entire transcription, but I’ve also included a digital image of one line with an illegible word (at least to me!) If anyone has any idea of what that last word is, please comment with your thoughts.  It feels like a critical word in an important sentence.

This is the first ancestral civil war narrative I’ve read that was not part of pension application file.  In other words, its purpose was not to highlight physical infirmities suffered on account of service.  (From that standpoint, it’s refreshing.)  Nor does it glorify participation.  It’s just a matter of  fact.

Continue reading ““Yes! I was a soldier in the civil war between the States….””

The Tip of the Iceberg

During NIGR week in July in Washington, DC, we went on an evening field trip to the DAR Library. For no good reason (other than there are too many places to go), I had only been there once before. It is beautiful! I looked forward to returning to …

During NIGR week in July in Washington, DC, we went on an evening field trip to the DAR Library.  For no good reason (other than there are too many places to go),  I had only been there once before.  It is beautiful!  I looked forward to returning to its open stacks, particularly the rich geographical resources organized by state, and within that, by county.  As on my previous visit last December, I made a beeline to resources on distant states of interest – like New Hampshire, Texas, Arkansas, and Alabama.

In the Travis County, Texas, section, I ran across the Austin Genealogical Society Quarterly, shelved with periodic index volumes.  I stood in the aisle and pulled the index volumes out one by one looking for the name Walling, our grandmother’s maiden name.   One index had a Walling entry pointing to an issue dated 1974, Vol. XV, No. 3, pp. 93-94.

Bingo!  as I say to myself very quietly in such moments….after all, I’m in the stacks.

Continue reading “The Tip of the Iceberg”

Even More on The Will of Robert G. Stephens

Several months ago, I reported on the Will of Robert G. Stephens and the objection to granting of testamentary letters to his son, John J. Stephens, and son-in-law, William J. Ray, filed by daughter Hulda and husband James Alexander Chapman Ruffne…

Several months ago, I reported on the Will of Robert G. Stephens and the objection to granting of testamentary letters to his son, John J.  Stephens, and son-in-law, William J. Ray, filed by daughter Hulda and husband James Alexander Chapman Ruffner, Sr.  Hulda and James alleged that Robert lacked testamentary capacity and signed his will under influence and duress.  And it was clear from the will’s terms that Robert was trying to keep Hulda’s inheritance out of her husband’s hands. You can review that post here.  I shared a research plan to uncover more of the back story of the family wrangling, one element of which was looking at Indiana County (PA) land records.  And, thanks to the Family History Library’s microfilm rental program, I was able to begin that work this week.

Indiana County Will Books document that Hulda and James filed a caveat asking for a court’s investigation on February 8, 1881, then withdrew it on  August 20, 1881.  On the same day –  August 20, 1881 – Hulda alone purchased property in West Indiana Township, Indiana County from John W. Sutton,  “bounded and described as follows, On the north by Church Street on the east by an Alley on the South by an Alley and on the West by Lot of Robert Smith, Being  Sixty feet in front and Extending back One hundred and forty-five feet more or less.” (1)  The terms are similar to the language of her father’s will; she was granted the property for her life, after which it would pass directly to her children.

“…to have and to hold the said Lot of ground during the life of the said Hulda Ruffner and at her death to descend from her to her Children as her heirs forever.  Instead and in place of the legacy as given the presenter and her children by the last  Will and Testament of Robert G. Stephens dec’d about which there has been a controversy which is settled by the Investment of the said Legacy in the purchase of the said Lot of ground hereby conveyed…” (2)

The consideration clause of the deed makes it clear that the purchase price of $1,200 was provided by John J. Stephens and William J. Ray.  In addition, on the same day, Hulda and James signed a quitclaim deed giving up any right to real estate previously conveyed by her father to her sister Amanda and husband, William J. Ray, in exchange for $400.  (3)  In other words, Robert’s executors paid $1,600 to quash the caveat – $400 in cash to James and Hulda and $1,200 in real  property to Hulda alone, an increase of $600 over what was granted her by the will.
 
Interesting.  But even more interesting is this —  the  property that Hulda purchased in 1881 with the caveat pay-off money had been acquired by James and Hulda in 1874. (4)  It was seized by the county sheriff, H. C. Brown in 1878, and sold to John W. Sutton for $105 to partially satisfy a $1,090 debt judgment (plus $37.92 court costs) secured against James on May 1, 1878 by the previous owner.  (5)  I haven’t yet examined the deed by which James and Hulda acquired the property in 1874, but on its face, it looks as if James defaulted on the purchase price. 

Little wonder now that Hulda’s family did not trust James – he had lost title to the family home and still owed more on the debt.  (6)  A few weeks after the Sheriff’s sale to Sutton, James and Hulda deeded the rest of their property interest to Sutton for $400 – more cash for them, and for him, a clearer title.  (7) As was legally required, Hulda was questioned out of the presence of her husband to establish that she was not pressured into conveying her interest, but one does wonder.  Pretty good return on investment  for Sutton; he acquired the property for a total of $505 and sold it back to Hulda three years later for $1,200.  That wasn’t the only Sheriff’s sale to Sutton; he seemed to make a habit of attending public auctions with cash in hand.

By the time the title of the family home was restored to Hulda in 1881,  the couple already had five children; the youngest was our grandfather, James, Jr. (8)  They relocated in the late 1890s to Westmoreland County (PA) – by that time, they had twelve children.  (9)

I don’t think I’m going out on a limb when I predict there will be more records telling more stories about this crowd.

Here’s the only visual I have for this story – my dining room wall!  I’ve hung James and Hulda as far apart as possible (in accordance with later life events.)  He’s in the upper left and she’s on the lower right.

The_gallery

———————————————————————————————–

(1)  Indiana County, Pennsylvania.  Deed Book B-43: 403, John W. Sutton to Hulda Ruffner, 20 August 1881; FHL microfilm 1319650.

(2)  Ibid.

(3)   Indiana County, Pennsylvania.  Deed Book B-43: 404, J. A. C. and Hulda Ruffner to William J. and Amanda Ray, 20 August 1881; FHL microfilm 1319650.

(4)  Indiana County, Pennsylvania.  Deed Book B-39: 176,  Estate of Sarah Works to J. A. C. Ruffner, 22 December 1874; FHL microfilm 1319646.

(5)  Indiana County, Pennsylvania.  Deed Book B-41: 620,  H. C. Brown to John W. Sutton, 7 June 1878; FHL microfilm 1319649.

(6)  The 1880 Federal Census show the family living on Church Street;  it looks as though they remained in residence even though they lost title. 1880 U. S. Census, Indiana County, Pennsylvania, pop. sched., West Indiana, enumeration district (ED) 127, p. 23-B, dwelling 53, family 53, J. A. C. Ruffner; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 10 September 2010); citing NARA microfilm publication T9, roll 1135. 

(7)  Indiana County, Pennsylvania.  Deed Book B-41: 620,  J. A. C. and Hulda Ruffner to John W. Sutton, 29 June 1878; FHL microfilm 1319649.

(8) 1880 U. S. Census, Indiana Co. Pa., pop. sched., West Indiana, ED 100, p. 23-B, dwell. 53,  fam. 53, J. A. C. Ruffner.  Pennsylvania Department of Health, death certificate no. 40219, James Alexander Chapman Ruffner, Jr. (1951);  Division of Vital Records, New Castle.

(9) 1900 U. S. Census, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, pop. sched., Greensburg Ward 3, enumeration district (ED) 100, p. 4-B, dwelling 84, family 91, J. A. C. Ruffner; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 10 September 2010); citing NARA microfilm publication T623, roll 1497.