Sunday, January 4, 2026

Lonnie Cecil Clyburn's "Medical Career"

     ©  Kathy Duncan, 2026

In my last post on Lewis H. Kelley, aka Lonnie Cecil Clyburn, I speculated that he had gone to Llano, Texas, to further his bogus medical career. But did he?

First, let's back up to 21 June 1913, when Red River County issued an arrest warrant against L. Clyburn for unlawfully practicing medicine. They also fined him $250, and each of his sureties was ordered to pay $250. On 27 June 1913, Lonnie C. Clyburn was probably with wife, Mettie (Bartlett) Clyburn, in Needville, Fort Bend County, Texas, when Mettie gave birth to their son, Lonnie Frank Clyburn. 

They must not have been in Needville very long because they turned up in Llano, Texas, nine months later. L. C. Clyburn ran this notice about leaving Llano for a few days for health reasons, but leaving his meat market business in the hands of Zumwalt. The only Zumwalt in town was a partner in a tailoring business. Zumwalt had not been in Llano very long either. 








































The odds are very good that the L. C. Clyburn is Lonnie Cecil Clyburn. There are no Clyburns in Llano County on the 1910 or 1920 census. No advertisements were run for Clyburn's meat market. This is the only mention of it in the newspaper.

On his way out of town, L. C. Clyburn stopped off at the courthouse long enough to file his paperwork from Red River County, which, of course, has no notation on it that they did not recognize the legitimacy of his medical license. A duplicate of his "medical license" was filed on 26 March 1914, a week after the meat market notice ran in the newspaper. 






















For many reasons, which will be covered in another post, it seems likely that L.C. Clyburn presented Llano County with his copy of the duplicate that he filed in Red River County and not his medical license from the state of Texas. 

By filing this document in Llano County, he now had a new document that could be presented elsewhere. It also created a long chain of removal from the medical license that was supposedly issued in 1908 - that chain now ran through Tarrant County, Red River County, and Llano County. Now, he could go to another county and present his Llano County duplicate. 

Why run a notice that he was leaving temporarily if his intention was to relocate elsewhere? If he owed someone money, he may have wanted to give the appearance that he intended to return rather than skedaddle. 

On 8 April 1914, Lewis H. Kelley's first wife, Eula Ann (Morgason) Kelley, obtained a divorce from him in Wood County, Texas, where the court noted that his whereabouts were unknown. 

On 13 and 30 November 1914, an advertisement for the Enterprise Mattress Factory ran in The Banner-Ledger of Ballinger, Texas. As far as I can tell, no advertisements ran before or after these dates. No one with the Clyburn surname appeared on the 1910 or 1920 Runnels County, Texas census. 











This advertisement indicates that L. C. Clyburn was probably not practicing medicine in Runnels County.

Ballinger, Texas, is 122 miles from Llano, Texas. Today, that is a two-hour car ride. In 1914, it would have taken much longer by wagon. Ballinger, Texas, is also on the way to the panhandle of Texas.

The next document that L. C. Clyburn appeared on is the original birth certificate of his daughter, Thelma Clyburn.
















This document places L. C. and Mettie (Bartlett) Clyburn in Amarillo, Potter County, Texas on 21 November 1915. Note that L.C. Clyburn's occupation is listed as "Business Man" not doctor or physician. E.A. Johnston, the doctor on this certificate, would surely have known if L.C. Clyburn was another doctor practicing medicine in Amarillo and would have recognized him as such.

The other thing to notice is that the child's name is left blank on this document. This required Thelma Clyburn to obtain a corrected birth certificate in 1948.


























Thelma's mother, Mettie (Bartlett) Clyburn Burrow, filled out this form. Notice that even though L. C. Clyburn was a "business man" and not practicing medicine at the time of Thelma's birth, Mettie stated that he was a medical doctor.

By the time World War I started, the Clyburns were in Chicota, Lamar County, Texas, where L.C. Clyburn enlisted. The Paris newspaper referred to him as Dr. L. C. Clyburn, but it is hard to know if he was practicing medicine or just using the title of doctor.













The U.S. Veterans Bureau lists him as a private in the Medical Department. Note that army records reflected Lewis H. Kelley's 1977 birthdate that he shared with his twin Ross T. Kelley, and not the 1876 date that Lonnie C. Clyburn used on his various medical licenses. 
















On 31 August  1918, L. C. Clyburn was on the roster of the U.S. Army Base Hospital at Eagle Pass, Texas.


























By World War I, doctors served as noncommissioned officers with a rank of at least a captain. They did not serve as privates - especially if they had been educated at Johns Hopkins. L. C. Clyburn's service as a private indicates that he was most likely an orderly in a hospital. 

The accurate birthdate filed with the army and his service as a private indicate that L.C. Clyburn was willing to risk scamming local government officials but not the U.S. military. 

After the war, L. C. Clyburn continued to live in Chicota, Lamar County, Texas, where he was predominantly a farmer and hauled ice for Griffin and Townsend's store. He was also absent for large periods of time while he was an inmate in various military hospitals.

In October 1922, his teeth were in poor condition, and a pearl from an oyster got trapped in a "hollow tooth." Notice that he was not referred to as "Dr. L. C. Clyburn." 





















In 1923, when L.C. Clyburn was seeking admission to a military hospital in San Antonio, he was referred to an "ex-service man." Note that he is not referred to as "Dr. L. C. Clyburn."




















Lonnie Cecil Clyburn died in Chicota, Texas in 1924.



























Lonnie Cecil Clyburn's death notice states that he had been a resident of Chicota, Texas, for the last ten or twelve years. However, twelve years before his death, in 1912, he was in Red River County, Texas, filing a duplicate of his medical license papers from Tarrant County, Texas. Eleven years before his death, in 1913, he was in Needville, Texas, dodging a warrant for practicing medicine unlawfully in Red River County, while waiting for his second wife to give birth to their first child. Ten years before his death, in 1914, he was running a meat market in Llano, Texas, and operating a mattress factory in Ballinger, Texas, while probably hoping that his first wife would not charge him with bigamy. Of course, she probably did not know that he had married another woman, or that would have been cited as a contributing factor to her 1914 request for a divorce. Nine years before his death, in 1915, he was in Amarillo, Texas, engaged in an unknown business when his daughter Thelma was born.   

Lewis Hamilton Kelley, aka Lonnie Cecil Clyburn, left his family with a lot of unanswered questions that have lingered for decades. He also left a lot of hard feelings among the various families of his siblings. 

Why claim to be the son of Capt. Lewis L. Clyburn and wife, Mary Jane Kelley, a prominent Camden, South Carolina family, who would never give away one of their children? The only answer seems to be that it conferred an aura of prominence on Lewis Hamilton Kelley. Plus, he needed a new name to use in order to marry one woman while being already married to another. Not to mention the charges of embezzlement that he was facing in Marion County, Texas in 1910. At the time he abandoned his wife, Eula, he had sold some mortgaged property. She did not learn of this until after he had left her without a penny. 

Why shift his birthdate by one year, but not the day or month? Because it put some distance between his real identity as Lewis H. Kelley.

Why claim to be a graduate of Johns Hopkins? This a claim that was made at least three times - in Tarrant County, in Red River County, and in Llano County. Because Johns Hopkins provided both an aura of prominence and was far away. It would take several months for the truth to catch up to him, and he was moving frequently.

Why claim to be a doctor, but not seem to ever practice medicine much? Because people tend to trust doctors. Being a doctor provides you with an aura of respectability. People are more likely to lend you money, give you a job, or go into business with you.  

Thursday, January 1, 2026

Wishing You a Happy 2026

    ©  Kathy Duncan, 2026





















Oddly, this year flew by even though each day seemed like a week long.

I managed to write 25 posts and have done a lot of research that has not been written up yet. This year, there were 123,781 page views, ending in a total of 392,237. That is not as exciting as it sounds since it is obvious that there are days when foreign entities are sending their webcrawlers to collect data on who knows what. 

This year's most popular posts in order:

1. Elizabeth (Powers) Piper, Plot Twist: This post was probably only popular because there is a famous person also named Elizabeth Powers, so a lot of people must have landed on this post by mistake. This was an important post in my research into James S. Piper's wives. I was happy to uncover Elizabeth's identity with the help of the full-text search on FamilySearch. However, the discovery of her identity indicates that there must be yet another wife, who was the mother of William H. Piper.

2. John Byrum, Bastardy Bond: This post was the most eye-opening one for me. Illegitimate births were more common in this time period than I realized, especially among widows. Unfortunately, most states were not keeping the level of records that North Carolina was. I was eventually able to uncover the identity of John Byrum's out-of-wedlock child and the correct Elizabeth Webb with the help of a group of Webb researchers on Facebook. Of course, I still need to write the follow-up post for that. 

3. Samuel Moore's Connections: In this post, I examined Samuel Moore as a candidate for the father of Arsena Moore and her siblings, and I tracked him back to Pitt County, North Carolina, where I was able to connect him to his parents and siblings. However, I do not have enough information to prove that Samuel was the father of Arsena (Moore) Barber.

My favorite blog posts:

1. Joseph Barber and the Moore Family: This post represented a breakthrough in connecting Arsena Moore to any other Moore. I had started to wonder if she really was a Moore. In the process, I found Arsena's siblings. Now I have a group of siblings looking for their parents. 

2. Nancy (Johnson) Brown and Elizabeth (Johnson) Selvy, sisters: This post centered around my breakthrough in locating Nancy (Johnson) Brown's long lost sister, Elizabeth Johnson. The Johnson name is so common that I did not think I would ever figure out what happened to her. This brick wall was broken down by one of those town gossip newspaper columns that recounted Cade Selvy's visit to his Lacy aunts and uncles in Kansas. Researching Cade Selvy led to his mother, Elizabeth Johnson, and her reunion with her sister, Mrs. J. D. Brown [Nancy (Johnson) Brown]!

3. James S. Piper Goes to Philadelphia, 1876: This little post recounts James S. Piper's trip to Philadelphia to celebrate the nation's Centennial as a representative of the Mexican War Veterans. This is the event for which his medal was created. That medal was the catalyst for my research into James S. Piper, my first cousins' ancestor. James S. Piper and his family have taught me a lot about various record groups.  

In the new year, I have plenty more posts about James S. Piper and family to write up, which is going to be my focus for a while. I also have a lot of information to post about the Selvys and the Brown's son Joel Herbert Brown. Finally, I need to follow up with the illegitimate child of John Byrum. 

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Lonnie Cecil Clyburn, Unlawfully Practicing Medicine

     ©  Kathy Duncan, 2025

When Lewis H. Kelley, aka Lonnie Cecil Clyburn, claimed in 1912 that he attended the medical school of the University of "John" Hopkins in Baltimore, Maryland, it would have taken the officials of Red River County several weeks or months to verify his claim, given that they would have written to the Texas State Board of Medical Examiners or Johns Hopkins and then waited for those institutions to search their records and respond. Note that this document is a duplicate of a document that L. Clyburn presented to them, making the claim that he had been licensed by the State in 1908.
















Six months later, Red River County had its answer and charged L. Clyburn with unlawfully practicing medicine. L. Clyburn and his three sureties each lost $250 over this. This court action ends with a warrant for L. Clyburn's arrest.

































In 1893, Johns Hopkins University of Medicine was the first U.S. university to require prerequisites: a bachelor's degree with coursework in biology, chemistry, and physics; and a reading proficiency in French and German, which were the languages of science at the time. 

Today, it's easy enough to research the students of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine through the university catalogs. Each catalog contains lists of officers, regents, faculty, and students. The students are listed by their year: fourth year, third year, second year, and first year. Therefore, it is possible to identify someone who only attended for one year. The catalogs are available for 1893 through 2008 and are easy to search by using the find button on your computer. You can search them yourself here.

Two names do not appear in the Johns Hopkins University of Medicine catalogs: Lewis H. Kelley and Lonnie Cecil Clyburn. 

Surely, a graduate of Johns Hopkins would not make the mistake of stating that he had attended "John Hopkins." 

None of this, however, deterred Lewis H. Kelley, aka Lonnie Cecil Clyburn. On 26 March 1914, he took his copy of the 1912 document from Red River County and filed it in Llano County, where, no doubt, he planned to practice medicine. 

As usual, I have attached documents to Family Search. 






Sunday, December 28, 2025

Obstacles in Newspaper Searches

    ©  Kathy Duncan, 2025

I have to wonder how many interesting tidbits are overlooked in our newspaper searches because newspapers often got so much wrong. That's why it is important to look at everything and have a good working knowledge of the person or the family you are seeking information on. 

This turned up in a search using my grandfather's name: W. S. Chapman. This might have been overlooked otherwise because my 2x great-grandfather's initials were M.P. and not R.P. as in M. P. Kelley. My great-grandmother was Henrietta Elizabeth "Bessie" (Kelley) Brown. Maude Brown? I have no idea how the author of this article ended up with the name Maude.

I did not know that my grandmother was unaware of this letter, written by her grandfather, M. P. Kelley, during the Civil War.  I also did not know that she shared it with the Clarksville Times of Clarksville, Texas. 




Wednesday, December 24, 2025

William H Piper, 1864 - 1871

   ©  Kathy Duncan, 2025

Part One. 

Based on the 1860 District of Columbia census, I inferred that William H. Piper, aged 12 and born in Washington, D C, was the son of James S. Piper and his wife, Elizabeth. Subsequent research revealed that Elizabeth was Elizabeth Powers and had been married to Ebenezer Bray on 26 April 1843 in the District of Columbia. By 1850, she was living with her mother, Jerusha Ann Powers, in DC. At that time, Elizabeth was still Elizabeth Bray and had not yet married James S. Piper. For that reason, she has been ruled out as the mother of William H. Piper, who would have been two years old in 1850. For many reasons, I have also ruled out Mary O'Hara, James S. Piper's first wife, as William's mother. Those reasons will be discussed in an upcoming post. 

William H. Piper, who was born in the District of Columbia, enlisted as a substitute for Thomas J. Vickers of Kent County, Maryland, on 1 December 1864. 








































William H. Piper was living in Easton, Maryland, at the time of his enlistment. William swore that he was eighteen; however, he was actually only sixteen. As an underage recruit, William H. Piper needed the permission of his parents to enlist. If his mother were deceased and James S. Piper was elsewhere, it may have been easier to lie about his age than to seek consent. William was described as having black eyes, dark hair, a florid complexion, and a height of 5' 3 1/2." His occupation was given as a laborer, and it's important to note that he served as a drummer. He served until the close of the war and was mustered out at Arlington Heights, Virginia, on 21 July 1865. 

William would have received $300 from the U.S. government for enlisting as a substitute and may have received additional funds from Thomas J. Vickers of Kent County, who was a wealthy man.

I don't know of any members of the Piper family living in Easton, Maryland, so perhaps William had relatives there from his mother's side of the family. 

On 19 November 1866, William H. Piper of Baltimore, Maryland, enlisted in the army. He was described as having brown eyes, dark hair, and a dark complexion. He was still misrepresenting his age; he claimed to be 21, which would make him a year older than he had claimed to be in 1864. His height was 5' 6 1/2." It's not surprising that, as a teenager, he had grown three more inches since 1864. He served with Company K of the 14th Infantry and was dishonorably discharged at Camp Cady, California, on 6 January 1868.

At this point in my research, I paused to research Camp Cady to see if I could find out what might have happened to bring about William's discharge.  Conditions at Camp Cady had deteriorated by late 1867. Soldiers were deserting in large numbers. One group of soldiers had gone out to round up deserters, but they also deserted. The bigger problem was that deserters did not move on. Instead, some of them stuck around to waylay travelers and to rob locals.

Before his arrival with the new recruits for the 14th Infantry, local newspapers were complaining about the behavior of the soldiers in the 14th. They were frequently drunken brawlers, and those were their best qualities. They were not just rogues. They stole horses from the locals, robbed people, and burgled local businesses. Everyone dreaded being approached by a soldier in uniform. One editor complained that Northern cities were cleaning up their own streets by putting their criminals in uniform and shipping them west in the 14th Infantry. 

F. M. Dean wrote this letter to the Guardian of San Bernardino, which they published on 31 August 1871. In it, he described having his station robbed and burned by a small detachment of soldiers. However, nothing indicates that they were deserters. 





























































According to the Los Angeles Daily News, six soldiers were tried and found guilty of the attack on Dean and his property. They were each sentenced to one to three years at San Quentin. The Los Angeles Daily News reported them en route to San Quentin on 11 October 1867:

































W. H. Piper, a native of the District of Columbia, was received at San Quentin on 14 October 1867. He had been convicted of robbery in San Bernardino. His age was given as 18, which comes closer to matching his age on the 1860 census. His occupation was "laborer." He was described as having dark eyes, brown hair, and a dark complexion. His height was recorded as being 5' 6 1/2." He was described as having an assortment of scars on his left hand. He was discharged from San Quentin on 22 January 1869. 

A vaccine mark was also noted on William's left arm. The Union Army routinely vaccinated its soldiers for smallpox during the war and during subsequent wars. I'm not sure if they routinely vaccinated soldiers in peacetime. 

The five men listed before W. H. Piper on the San Quentin intake register are probably the other soldiers who were sentenced along with William for the atrocity at Dean's station. They were George T. Ingle, a 16-year-old laborer born in Maryland with a vaccine mark on his left arm; John Cripps, a 22-year-old laborer born in England; Thomas Maloney, a 20-year-old laborer born in Ireland with a vaccine mark on left arm; Edward McHugh, a 19-year-old printer born in New Brunswick with a tattoo on left arm; and John Adams, a 21-year-old laborer born in Ireland with a tattoo of an eagle with swords Union and Liberty on his right arm. 

A military report for Company K from October 1867 states that five of the men listed on the San Quentin register were musicians who had been held in San Bernardino by civil authorities since 19 September 1867. Edward McHugh does not appear on this list, so it is possible that he was not a soldier and not involved in the Dean incident.

Visitors to San Quentin during this time period were scandalized by conditions there. The prisoners were poorly fed and engaged in forced labor. Some prisoners were operating their own stores and selling merchandise to their fellow prisoners at highly inflated prices. Gambling was common. Visitors predicted that the prisoners would be more hardened criminals when they were released.

The sergeant, who Dean stated oversaw the loading and removal of his supplies, was not charged by a grand jury. Note West's defense was that he "acted in obedience to orders, in saving the goods from destruction belonging to a man named Strous." Notice that there was no attempt to extinguish the flames consuming Dean's house. As Dean related the events, he was actively trying to put out the fire while the military made off with the goods. Then, just as Dean related, Sergeant West left, leaving Dean to his fate.  





















On 12 May 1868, William H. Piper, along with John Cripps, George T. Engle, and Thomas Maloney, announced that they would be seeking a pardon for their participation in the robbery of Dean: 





















While they were waiting for their pardons, their commanding officer, Lt. Manuel Eyre, Jr., was tried for the events at Dean's station. Note that George T. Engle, John Cripp, and Thomas Maloney are mentioned, but not William H. Piper. Lt. Eyre is the same lieutenant who left Dean in the desert with no food and no shelter from an oncoming storm. The judge dismissed the charges against Eyre, but some jury members said that they would have convicted him if the case had been allowed to proceed. Clearly, the author of this letter also would have liked to see him convicted. 













































































On 3 February 1869, the governor of California pardoned William H. Piper. I have not discovered if Cripps, Engle, and Maloney were pardoned.














William Piper remained a free man for only six days. On 28 January 1869, he reenlisted while in San Francisco, California. His place of birth was given as Washington, D.C., and his age as 21. Once again, his occupation is given as "musician." He was recorded as having black eyes, brown hair, and a fair complexion. He served with the 23rd Infantry Co. E  and C, and was dishonorably discharged on 12 December 1871 at Fort Vancouver, Washington.

This additional stint in the military is probably why I cannot find William H. Piper on the 1870 census.

Originally, I planned a post on William H. Piper that I estimated would only be a paragraph or two summarizing his military enlistments, but the details I found ballooned into enough material that two posts will be necessary. Stay tuned for part two. 



Sunday, December 7, 2025

James S Piper, 1864

  ©  Kathy Duncan, 2025

James S. Piper was still imprisoned in the old Capitol Building at the beginning of 1864. He was also still writing letters proclaiming his innocence.

Finally, on 2 April 1864, he took another Oath of Allegiance:















Then, also on 2 April 1864,  the order was given for Piper to be freed:






















One of the conditions of his release was that he was not to go south of the Potomac River.  Piper seems to have honored that condition, but it did not stop him from returning to his circle of southern sympathizers. In September of 1864, he joined the Democratic Association, which was still meeting in Washington DC: 








Sunday, November 30, 2025

James S. Piper Goes to Philadelphia, 1876

 ©  Kathy Duncan, 2025

My intent was to post James S. Piper's life in chronological order, but I am going to jump from 1863 to 1876. I will get back on track with an 1864 post soonish. 

James S. Piper is my cousins' Mexican War veteran ancestor, whom I started tracking in mid-2024. He went from being a mysterious man who left his medal and papers in a trunk and about whom not much else was known to being a man who left an interesting paper trail that includes almost every year of his life. In fact, his file on my computer is full of subfiles dated by year. None of my ancestors or my husband's have produced that much information.  

This weekend, I opened two new subfiles for James S. Piper that are dated 1876 and 1888. 

My first blog post about James S. Piper was about his Mexican War medal, which was the post that triggered my research into his life. Piper's Mexican War medal was not issued by the U.S. government. Instead, it was issued by the National Association of Mexican War Veterans. The bar pin for it only says "National Association of Veterans." That medal was either given or sold to the veterans in 1876, and now, with the help of J. S. Piper, I have a better understanding of why that was significant.

By 1876, the Mexican War veterans had been lobbying unsuccessfully for decades for pensions. However, they did not form the National Association of Mexican War Veterans until 1874. If they had formed a National Association at the close of the Mexican War, they probably would have received pensions much earlier. 

In 1876, our nation was celebrating its Centennial, and the place to be was Philadelphia. Large numbers of veterans, all wearing the same medal, would help garner attention for their cause, which is what they desperately needed. With that in mind, Mexican War Associations began preparing well in advance to send veterans from every state to Philadelphia. It's estimated that veterans from thirty-three states and territories went to Philadelphia. 

The first step in that process was to fund transportation to Philadelphia. By 12 April 1876, Col. Thomas A. Scott, President of the Texas and Pacific Railway, had promised to issue certificates of transportation to veterans of the Mexican War and of the Texas Revolution so that they could travel to Philadelphia for the Centennial. Most states seem to have found a way to provide transportation for their veterans. 

On 9 June 1876, a letter from General N. G. Shelby, President of the Mexican War veterans residing in Texas, was published in the Dallas Daily Herald to the effect that there were 600 members residing in Texas, but only about 160 had taken the necessary steps to obtain their certificates of transportation. He was using the newspaper as a means of getting word out to the veterans. They were to convene in Marshall, Texas, on 28 June 1876 and then continue as a group to Philadelphia. Apparently, anyone who had not obtained their certificate needed to do so as quickly as possible.

J. S. Piper was among the Texas veterans who arrived in Marshall, Texas, on the 28th of June. The Marshall newspaper published a list of the veterans going to Philadelphia. Piper's name is near the bottom of the list with the notation that he was from Collin County, Texas. This places his arrival in Texas by 1876, and in a county where I did not know that he lived.

























A second newspaper report on 1 July 1876, confirmed that J. S. Piper was among those headed to Philadelphia, where he would wear his Association medal with pride and further the campaign for veterans' pensions. After all, he had begun working in 1847 for benefits to be awarded to the survivors of his men who had been wounded or killed in action. 
























The Mexican War Veterans were in Philadelphia for the 4th of July events. Cannons fired, church bells rang, and a parade marched through the center of Philadelphia to a stage decorated with flags and where a German band played "Hail to Columbia."

The highlight for the Mexican War Veterans happened on 5 July 1876, when the third annual reunion of the National Association of the Mexican War Veterans was held. 

Records were kept of attendees at the National Association reunion meetings, and it would be worth examining them. The 1877 meeting was held in Washington, DC. I wonder if James S. Piper went back to his old stomping grounds for that one. 


Elizabeth (Powers) Piper, Plot Twist