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Showing posts with label Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Smith. Show all posts

Saturday, January 9, 2016

Shopping Saturday: Lakeport Grocery

My first cousin twice removed Louise Margaret Gray owned Lakeport Grocery in Lakeport, New York. I am not sure when she purchased the store, but I know that she owned it while she was married to her third husband Leonard D. Smith. The store was later known as Fox's Lakeport Grocery after she married her fourth husband Maurice Otis Fox.

The store was a grocery and a service station. A 6-room house was attached to the store.

Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY), 2 August 1968

Milk was available in disposable containers.

Mexico Independent (Mexico, NY), 29 August 1955

Beer was also available for purchase.

Madison County Times (Chittenango, NY), 1 July 1960

S&H Green Stamps were given to the store's customers.

Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY), 16 February 1950

When Louise was in the process of retiring, a grocery store auction was held. The ad for the sale included a list of the store's contents.

Daily Sentinel (Rome, NY), 11 August 1971

Louise owned the store until at least 1973.

Sunday, June 7, 2015

52 Ancestors: Week 23 "Wedding": Anna Elizabeth Gatlin and All Her Husbands

My great-grandfather's sister Anna Elizabeth Gatlin had many weddings, and so did her husbands!

Anna was born in Nashville, Tennessee on 3 December 1890. She was the daughter of John William Morton Gatlin and Sarah Claire "Sadie" Dyer. Anna married her first husband, Frank Joseph Smith, on 5 July 1910 in Williamson County, Tennessee.

Marriage record, Frank Smith and Anna Gatlin. 5 July 1910. Williamson County, Tennessee, Available from Ancestry.com. Tennessee State Marriages, 1780-2002 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008.

Frank worked as a stenographer for J. B. Ransom & Co. Most of Anna's family moved to Chicago, Illinois (where my great-grandparents were already living), but Anna and Frank stayed in Nashville at least until 1916.

Nashville City Directory with Revised Map 1914. 50th volume. New York: Marshall-Bruce-Polk. Available from Ancestry.com. U.S. City Directories, 1821-1989 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.

By 1920, they were living in Upper Penns Neck, Salem County, New Jersey with their daughter, Claire Marie Smith, who was born about 1911-1912.  Frank was working as a clerk in a dye plant.

1920 United States census, Carneys Point Village, Upper Penns Neck Township, Salem County, New Jersey, population schedule, enumeration district 191, sheet 5A. Available from Ancestry.com. 1920 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2010. Images reproduced by FamilySearch.

I am not sure when Anna left New Jersey or when she and Frank split up, but on 3 July 1928, she married Charles Morrison in Lucas County, Ohio. They were both residents of Detroit, Michigan at the time of their marriage. Anna claimed that the marriage was her first.

Ohio, County Marriages, 1789-2013, index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2Q4Q-4D8), Charles Morrison and Anna E Smith, 3 Jul 1928; citing Lucas, Ohio, United States, reference ; county courthouses, Ohio; FHL microfilm 2,168,583.

On 23 October 1931, Anna was granted a divorce from Charles. The cause was extreme cruelty. The case was contested.

Morrison v. Morrison, Wayne County, Michigan, 23 October 1931 decree. Ancestry.com. Michigan, Divorce Records, 1897-1952 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. Original data: Michigan. Divorce records. Michigan Department of Community Health, Division for Vital Records and Health Statistics, Lansing, Michigan.

Anna's next husband was Cornelius Thomas de Kam. Cornelius was from Wissenkerke, Noord-Beveland, Zeeland, Netherlands. On 28 August 1900 in Wentworth, Ontario, Canada, he married Grace Matilda Brandon. Grace died in Detroit, Michigan on 11 October 1918. On 21 June 1919, Cornelius married Anna Jacoba Peterson. Anna was granted a divorce from Cornelius on 13 October 1932. The cause was extreme cruelty. Perhaps infidelity was a factor. Just sixteen days later, on 29 October 1932 in Bowling Green, Wood County, Ohio, Cornelius married Anna E. (Gatlin) Morrison.

Ohio, County Marriages, 1789-2013, index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2Q4B-LM4), Cornelius T Dekam and Anna E Morrison, 29 Oct 1932; citing Wood, Ohio, United States, reference ; county courthouses, Ohio; FHL microfilm 2,367,788.

On 26 November 1935, Cornelius was granted a divorce from Anna. The cause was extreme and repeated cruelty. The case was not contested.

de Kam v. de Kam, Wayne County, Michigan. 26 November 1935 decree. Ancestry.com. Michigan, Divorce Records, 1897-1952 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. Original data: Michigan. Divorce records. Michigan Department of Community Health, Division for Vital Records and Health Statistics, Lansing, Michigan.

On 26 May 1936 in Lucas County, Ohio, Cornelius remarried his former wife Anna Jacoba (Peterson) de Kam. Anna (Gatlin) de Kam took a job as a saleswoman at Frank & Seder, and lived at the Strathmoore Hotel.

Polk's Detroit (Wayne County, Mich.) City Directory 1937. Centennial ed. Detroit: R. L. Polk & Co. Available from Ancestry.com. U.S. City Directories, 1821-1989 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.

Anna's last husband was Russell Joseph Doying. The two of them had something in common: multiple marriages! Russell (who at that time was going by the name Joseph R. Doying) married Gladys M. Kiefer on 14 December 1916 in Redford, Wayne County, Michigan. She divorced him on 31 March 1920 because of extreme cruelty and non-support. On 31 March 1923 in Highland Park, Wayne County, Michigan, he married Minerva I. Coffron. She divorced him on 20 January 1927 because of extreme cruelty. On 5 August 1929 in Highland Park, Wayne County, Michigan, he married Jane G. Morgan. He divorced her on 19 May 1930 because of extreme cruelty. On 14 February 1931 in Highland Park, Wayne County, Michigan, he married Anna D. Gorenson. He divorced her on 31 January 1934 because of cruelty.

Under her first husband's surname, Smith, Anna married Russell Joseph Doying on 17 May 1937 in Detroit, Michigan. It was her fourth marriage and his fifth.

Marriage record, Russell J. Doying and Anna E. Smith, 17 May 1937. Wayne County, Michigan. Available from Ancestry.com. Michigan, Marriage Records, 1867-1952 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015. Original data: Original data: Michigan, Marriage Records, 1867–1952. Michigan Department of Community Health, Division for Vital Records and Health Statistics.

Anna and Russell divorced on 4 June 1941 in Wayne County, Michigan. She never remarried. She died in August 1964. According to the Social Security Death Index, her last residence was Illinois. I am still searching for her exact date of death and her place of death.

Monday, April 13, 2015

Amanuensis Monday: Joseph S. Tarkington's Southern Claims Commission Claim: Cross-Examination of Witness, Alfred Smith

When Joseph S. Tarkington filed Louisiana claim #12265 with the Southern Claims Commission, another of his witnesses was his former slave Alfred Smith. I do not know if Alfred was related to Joseph's other former slave who testified, Jack Smith. Alfred's cross-examination is transcribed below.

Cross-examined by the Commissioner - Witness answers as follows:

My name is Alfred Smith, I am 40 or thereabout. I live in New Orleans and am engaged as fire-man on a Mississippi river boat. I was born a slave of the claimant and lived with him until the end of the war. I do believe that the claimant always had been a strong Union man, during the war I have often heard him talk against the Confederacy and say he did not want anything to do with it and would not be mixed up with it. I have heard men threaten to whip the claimant and drive him out of the parish on account of his Union sentiments, and for a long time he could not go to town for fear of these threats being executed. The claimant and his wife often gave United States soldiers food, milk, &c. but he never gave the Confederates anything at all - they were too much against him. I used often to go to Franklin with the claimant and the people would beset him to join them in Secession and threaten to whip him if he did not, but he would always refuse and take no part at all in the fuss. One time I remember of they were going to cow-hide him because he would not join them and had he stood they would have whiped [sic] him, he ran away manfully jumped into his skiff and went home. I feel sure that the claimant never could prove loyalty to the Confederacy if the same had been maintained as a separate government because of the reasons I have already expressed. I have no interest in this claim at all.                   

                                                               his
                                                    Alfred  X  Smith
                                                             mark


 Sworn before me this 25th day of June 1872
                                              Wm. Grant
                                              Special Comm


Cross-examination of witness, Alfred Smith, 25 June 1872; Orleans Parish, Louisiana claim no. 12265 (Joseph S. Tarkington), Allowed Case Files, Southern Claims Commission, 1871-1880; Settled Accounts and Claims, Third Auditor. Records of the Treasury Department Accounting Officers, Record Group 217. National Archives, Washington, DC. Available from Fold3.

Cross-examination of witness, Alfred Smith, 25 June 1872; Orleans Parish, Louisiana claim no. 12265 (Joseph S. Tarkington), Allowed Case Files, Southern Claims Commission, 1871-1880; Settled Accounts and Claims, Third Auditor. Records of the Treasury Department Accounting Officers, Record Group 217. National Archives, Washington, DC. Available from Fold3.

Cross-examination of witness, Alfred Smith, 25 June 1872; Orleans Parish, Louisiana claim no. 12265 (Joseph S. Tarkington), Allowed Case Files, Southern Claims Commission, 1871-1880; Settled Accounts and Claims, Third Auditor. Records of the Treasury Department Accounting Officers, Record Group 217. National Archives, Washington, DC. Available from Fold3.

Monday, April 6, 2015

Amanuensis Monday: Joseph S. Tarkington's Southern Claims Commission Claim: Cross-Examination of Witness, Jack Smith

Joseph S. Tarkington filed Louisiana claim #12265 with the Southern Claims Commission. One of the witnesses was Jack Smith, his former slave and employee. When Joseph married Nancy (Sanders) Theall (the widow of Joseph Theall), Jack became his slave. Jack's cross-examination is transcribed below.

Cross-examination of witness, Jack Smith, by the Commissioner

My name is Jack Smith, I am 45 years old, and reside at present at 20 St. James St. New Orleans La. I am at present working as a gardner [sic]. Before the war I resided in the Parish of St. Mary La. J. S. Tarkington was my master, for thirty years before the war, I became his servant through marriage, and I resided with him until the close of the war, but after the proclamation of emancipation he paid me wages. I left him in 1865, because he broke up, being too poor to continue farming. The claimant was always called a Union man among the coloured people. I have heard the claimant openly speak against the Confederates to white people, and if he had been a younger man they would have prosecuted him. I know that the claimant never took any part in the war and did all in his power to assist the Union cause. I heard the claimant urge the young men at the Court house not to go to the Confederate Army, but I do not know of any other act done or language used by claimant which would have prevented him establishing his loyalty to the Confederacy. I have no interest in this claim.

                                                                    his

                                                            Jack x Smith
                                                                  mark

Sworn before me this
12th day of April 1872
Wm. Grant

Cross-examination of witness, Jack Smith, 12 April 1872; Orleans Parish, Louisiana claim no. 12265 (Joseph S. Tarkington), Allowed Case Files, Southern Claims Commission, 1871-1880; Settled Accounts and Claims, Third Auditor. Records of the Treasury Department Accounting Officers, Record Group 217. National Archives, Washington, DC. Available from Fold3.

Cross-examination of witness, Jack Smith, 12 April 1872; Orleans Parish, Louisiana claim no. 12265 (Joseph S. Tarkington), Allowed Case Files, Southern Claims Commission, 1871-1880; Settled Accounts and Claims, Third Auditor. Records of the Treasury Department Accounting Officers, Record Group 217. National Archives, Washington, DC. Available from Fold3.

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Thriller Thursday: Lakeport Grocery Holdup

On 30 December 1957, two men robbed the Lakeport Grocery in Lakeport, Sullivan, Madison County, New York. My first cousin twice removed Louise Margaret Gray and her husband Leonard Smith operated the store. Leonard was hit on the head with a pipe, and the men stole about $60 from the cash register.

 Daily Sentinel (Rome, NY), 31 December 1957, page 12

Sunday, January 4, 2015

Census Sunday: My Cousin's Husband Was the Census Enumerator

Leonard Smith, the husband of my first cousin twice removed Louise Margaret Gray, worked as a census enumerator. Below is the page from the 1930 United States census that his family appeared on. They were living in Danube Township, Herkimer County, New York.
1930 United States census, Danube Township, Herkimer County, New York, population schedule, enumeration district 22-2,  sheet no. 6B. Available from Ancestry.com. 1930 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2002. 

 This closeup of the upper right hand corner shows that Leonard Smith was the census enumerator.


This closeup of the Smith family shows that Leonard's occupation was Enumerator, US Census.


The 1940 United States census that Leonard Smith's household appeared on is shown below. Leonard's father Darius Smith passed away in 1933, but Leonard and his mother and sister were living in Danube, Herkimer County, New York. The census page shows that they lived in the unincorporated place Indian Castle.

1940 United States census, Indian Castle, Danube, Herkimer County, New York, population schedule, enumeration district 22-3, sheet no. 5A. Available from Ancestry.com. 1940 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012. 

This closeup of the upper right hand corner once again shows that Leonard Smith was the census enumerator.


This closeup of Leonard Smith's household shows that that Leonard's occupation was census enumerator, US Census. Naturally, he was the one that provided the information to the census enumerator (himself!)

Sunday, October 5, 2014

52 Ancestors: #40 Louise Margaret Gray

Louise Margaret Gray was born on 6 December 1906 in Nashville, Tennessee. She was the daughter of Margaret Tarkington, my great-grandmother's sister. According to her Social Security account application, her father was Frank Gray. I suspect that Louise's parents never married. Margaret Tarkington appears in Nashville, Tennessee city directories in 1906 and 1908 under her maiden name. She was not listed in 1907, but she was probably home taking care of her baby daughter, not working as a telephone operator. I cannot find Louise in the 1910 United States census. She is not listed in her mother's household.which also included Margaret's mother, brother, and one of her sisters. she may have been living in her mother's home, but not mentioned because she was illegitimate.

In 1920, Louise and her mother Margaret lived in Chicago, Illinois, where my great-grandmother Gertrude (Tarkington) Gatlin (her sister) was living with her husband and son (my great-grandfather and my paternal grandfather). Margaret was using the surname Gray, and was widowed according to the 1920 United States census. However, in Nashville she had been Margaret Tarkington. Margaret worked as a maid, and she and Louise lived with Laurence and Mildred Moore.

By 1924, Louise's mother Margaret had married John Joseph Berberick, a pharmacist's mate in the United States Navy, and the family was living in Buffalo, New York. In 1925, she was working as a saleslady. On 24 July 1926 in Buffalo, Louise married Fredrick Plaumann. In 1930, she lived with her husband and his parents and siblings in Buffalo.

Her mother and stepfather had moved to Cedarville, Columbia, Herkimer County, New York. Louise's mother Margaret died there on 12 January 1929. After 1930, Louise moved to Cedarville. Her maternal grandmother Anna Malvina "Annie" (Binkley) Tarkington had lived there part-time with her son-in-law John Joseph Berberick. Louise probably lived with them too. Annie died on 24 January 1935 in Memphis, Tennessee while staying with another of her granddaughters, Nina (Leech) Clark. In 1936, Louise married her stepfather John Joseph Berberick in Boston, Massachusetts. They continued to live in Cedarville until John Joseph Berberick died on 2 October 1939. Two months later, Louise filled out an application for a Social Security account. She was living at 4710 No. Wolcott Av., Chicago, Illinois. That was my great-grandmother's address. Louise had gone to stay with her aunt after the death of her husband.

By the time of the 1940 United States census, Louise had returned to Cedarville. Her occupation was "new worker." By 1947, Louise had moved to Little Falls, Herkimer County, New York.

Louise married Leonard D. Smith, and they ran the Lakeport Grocrery Store in Lakeport, Madison County, New York. Leonard died on 17 March 1964. Louise's last husband was Maurice O. Fox. She probably met him through Leonard's sister, Elsie (Smith) Fox. She continued to run the grocery store with her new husband. Maurice Fox died on 9 February 1975. Louise died on 28 July 1979 in Utica, New York. She was buried in Cedarville Cemetery, West Winfield, New York, next to her husband Leonard D. Smith.

When I started researching the Tarkington family, I did not know that Margaret Tarkington had a daughter. When I found her husband John Joseph Berberick's obituary, it mentioned that his second wife (and his widow) was Louise Plaumann. I remembered seeing the name Louise Berberick in my father's baby book; she, my great-grandmother, and the man that became my great-grandmother's second husband had given my father a gift for his first birthday. I wondered why my great-grandmother was so close to her sister's widower's second wife, and did more research on her. I came across a newspaper item which mentioned that Louise Plaumann had learned of the death of her great-grandmother, Mrs. Annie Tarkington. WHAT? I searched for more information and found an "in memoriam" notice placed for Margaret Tarkington Berberick by Joe Berberick and Louise Plaumann, husband and daughter. That's when I realized that Margaret had had a daughter, and that Louise had married her stepfather.

Since I could not find Louise in the 1910 United States census, I assumed that she had been born after 1910. I took a to Cedarville Cemetery to see the graves of my great-grandmother and her sister Margaret. While I was there, I noticed that the stone next to the gravestone for my great-grandmother and her second husband was of a similar style. It was on the grave of Louise G. Smith, born 1906, and Leonard D. Smith, born 1907. Although I thought that Louise had probably been born after 1910, I took a picture of the stone anyway. I am so glad that I did! When the 1940 United States census became available, I searched for Louise Berberick and found her. She had been born about 1907.

I searched for the obituary of Leonard D. Smith, and it mentioned that he was survived by his wife Louise. When I obtained the obituary of Laura (Tarkington) Leech, another of my great-grandmother's sisters, it mentioned many surviving family members, including nieces. One was Mrs. Maurice Fox of New York. She was the only person listed that I could not identify, and she was in the same state that Louise had lived in. I wondered if Louise had married again. I found a Louise Fox, born 1906, in the Social Security Death Index. I searched for an obituary for her; when I found one, it stated that she was a native of Nashville, Tennessee. I ordered her Social Security application. On the application, she stated that her parents were Frank Gray and Margaret Tarkington. I had found Louise.

The entry in my father's baby book that made me wonder about the relationship between my great-grandmother and Louise 

Utica Observer-Dispatch, 27 January 1935, page 7. When I found this item, I learned that Louise was my relative.

Utica Daily Press, 12 January 1931. When I found this item, I learned that Louise was Margaret's daughter. Margaret had actually passed away two years before the notice was published, not six.

Steber's Little Falls and Dolgeville (Herkimer County, N.Y.) City Directory, 1947

Madison County Times, Chittenango, Madison County, NY, 1 July 1960, page 6

Daily Sentinel, Rome, NY, 11 August 1971

Chittenango-Bridgeport Times, 1 August 1979

Louise G. and Leonard D. Smith gravestone, Cedarville Cemetery