Saturday, February 29, 2020

Johnsons in Samuel Johnson's Sphere

©  Kathy Duncan, 2020

This could just as easily be called the curse of the common name.

In my efforts track Samuel Johnson, who married Esther Bryant, who died in Pike County, Illinois prior to 1848, and who left four orphan children, I am been trying to locate ANY other Johnson associated with him. To date, I've found three possibilities.

First up is Martha Johnson, age 74 in 1860. She was living in the household of Isaac S. and Catherine (Hay) Brown. Martha Johnson was born in New York:









This Martha Johnson is worth noting because Isaac  S. Brown's son John Deloss Brown married Samuel Johnson's daughter Nancy Johnson in Pike County three years prior to this census in 1857. In 1850 Martha Johnson was living alone in her own household in the same community. That census showed her with $100 in real estate. It's also worth noting that Isaac S. Brown's mother-in-law Amy Hay who is also in the household in 1860 was born in New York, too. So far, I don't know how Martha Johnson might connect to Samuel Johnson. Since she is a contemporary of Amy Hay, I could speculate that she was Samuel Johnson's mother. The Brown's might taken in Nancy (Johnson) Brown's grandmother. She could be an aunt of Samuel's. If Samuel was many years older than his wife Esther Bryant, then Martha might be his old maid sister or his widowed sister-in-law. However, Martha Johnson's New York birthplace might indicate a connection to Amy Hay. They could have been sisters. Since they are the same age, could they have been twin sisters? The only thing I can figure out is that Martha Johnson had $100 in real estate that I need to locate in the deed records. Knowing how she acquired it and how she disposed of it may shed some light on her connection.

Next up is John A. Johnson, who witnessed this 1834 land deed transaction for Samuel Johnson in Pike County, Illinois:









Before I get into John A. Johnson, can I just say how sweet it is to see Esther's name on this deed? Since it is dated in 1834 and eldest son Pete Johnson was born about 1834, I feel more confident that Esther was the mother of all the Johnson children. That has been a question mark in my mind since Esther was only 34 in 1850 and Pete Johnson was already 16. That means she was a very young bride and mother.

This John Johnson seems most likely to be relative of some sort. Brother or father seems like the best possibility. Although, cousin or uncle cannot be ruled out. Now that I look at this, I don't think I can be certain that the middle initial is an A. So I just stopped writing and took a moment to search for capital As among this clerk's capital letters. As luck would have it, I did not have to look far. This deed was from Samuel Johnson to R. R. Green and Austin Barber. Here's what Austin Barber's name looks like earlier in the text:









Based on this, I'd say John Johnson's middle initial is an A. I have not had much luck tracking John A. Johnson. I need to look for him in the land deeds. Then what?

I've saved the best and most puzzling for last. William Johnson of Burr Oak, Kansas came calling on his cousin Nancy (Johnson) Brown in 1894. She was living in Weldon, DeWitt Co., IL at the time. I believe the clipping is accurate in identifying this William is a cousin. Nancy did not have any brothers named William, and as far as I can tell, she did not have a nephew named William.










In 1900 there was a William Johnson in Burr Oak, Jewell County, Kansas who was divorced and living with his grown son Edward C. Johnson. I've located William's ex-wife and his other children, and I've tracked William back to the 1880 census. However, I have not definitively linked this William Johnson to his parents. Knowing who is father was might provide the key to solving my Samuel Johnson problem.

Friday, February 28, 2020

Tracking Samuel and Esther (Bryant) Johnson Through Their Children

©  Kathy Duncan, 2020

Tracking the origins of Samuel Johnson and his wife Esther Bryant has been especially difficult, partly because I don't know where they married or where they were born. According to family tradition, Samuel Johnson was an early settler of Pike County, Illinois, and he and Esther were from Kentucky.

Samuel Johnson was mostly likely deceased by 22 March 1848 when Esther married Robert C. Lacy in Pike County, Illinois. In 1850, they were still living in Pike County with four of the Johnson children and their own first child.









It is through the younger Johnson children that I know what I know about Samuel and Esther. One of Nancy (Johnson) Brown's sons-in-law, specifically A. F. Miller was featured in the Portrait and Biographical Album Sangamon County published in 1891 when both John D. and Nancy (Johnson) Brown were still living. That text details that Nancy's father was Samuel Johnson:

"John D. Brown, father of Mrs. Miller, was reared in Pike County, where he married Miss Nancy Johnson, a native of that county, and a daughter of Samuel Johnson, who was born in Kentucky, but is numbered among the early settlers of Pike County."

 Nancy's younger brother Richard M Johnson died on 10 September 1923 in Lovington, Moultrie County, Illinois. His death certificate reveals that his parents were Samuel Johnson and Esther Bryant, and that is the source for Esther's maiden name.

That leaves the older two Johnson children to research: Pete Johnson born c 1834 in Illinois and Elizabeth Johnson born c. 1836 in Illinois. They have proven to be more difficult. None of the Johnson children are still with Robert and Esther (Bryant) Lacy in 1860. That leaves limited possibilities for what happened to them. Either they died young, married, or branched out on their own to unknown locations.

My next step is to look for them in the marriages of Pike County, Illinois since I am guessing that they may have married in the years preceding the marriages of their younger Johnson siblings in Pike County and before the Lacys removed to Kansas. That narrows my search for them to 1850 - 1869. The following marital unions in Pike County are possibilities:

1. Miss Eliza Johnson married Isaac Dalbo on 12 February 1852 in Pike County.

The descendants of Isaac Dalbow have identified their ancestress as Eliza Mustard in various death certificates. Certainly, an Eliza Mustard had married an S.S. Johnson in Pike County in 1848. She may very well be the same Eliza who married Isaac Dalbow in 1852. She is tentatively ruled out.

2. Elizabeth Johnson married George W.  Burges on 5 January 1857 in Pike County.

Besides being unable to locate this couple on the 1860 census, it looks like George W. Burgess married Mrs. Elizabeth Johnson. This tentatively rules out this Elizabeth because the Elizabeth Johnson I am looking for would be a single woman.






3. Elizabeth E. Johnson married George W. Pine on 4 April 1867 in Pike County.

The Elizabeth Johnson who married George W. Pine may have been a Johnston. Her marriage in 1867 makes her an outlier because I would expect the Elizabeth that I am looking for to have married earlier. Although she was born in Illinois, multiple census years place this Elizabeth's birth in 1845, which would make her nine years younger than the Elizabeth Johnson I am seeking. This Elizabeth's father was born in Virginia instead of Kentucky.

4. Elizabeth Johnston married William R. Curry on 24 May 1860 in Pike County.

The 1860 Pike County census reveals that Lizzie Curry, wife of W. R. Curry, was only 16 years old. She is too young to be the Elizabeth who was the daughter of Samuel Johnson. Samuel's daughter would have been about 24 in 1860.

5. Peter C. Johnson married Nancy Seelock on 24 January 1861 in Pike County.

Nancy Johnson, wife of  P. C. Johnson, was born 19 January 1842 and died 3 March 1867. She is buried in Summer Hill Cemetery,  Martinsburg Twp. in Pike County, Illinois. That would account for the following marriage of Peter C. Johnson to Amanda Richardson.

6. Peter C. Johnson married Amanda Richardson on 29 November 1868 in Pike County.

On the 1880 Pike County census there is a Peter Johninson married to an Amanda. That Peter was born in 1838 in Illinois, but his parents were both born in New Jersey. If the census is accurate, he is a little too young and his parents were born in the wrong location. He is tentatively ruled out.

My take away at this point is that searching for the low hanging fruit in Pike County did not get me anywhere other than to rule people out. Should I consider that both Peter and Elizabeth went with the Lacys to Kansas in 1869 and found spouses there? Then there is the possibility that they married in Illinois but in a neighboring county. But where? I am not ready to assume that they died young.

Friday, February 21, 2020

John Deloss Brown Obituaries AND a Bonus

©  Kathy Duncan, 2020

A couple of years ago, I found four death notices for John Deloss Brown that briefly reported his death in Missouri and his burial in Weldon, Dewitt County, Illinois in 1914. They were nice to have but lacked the richness of detail that an obituary might include. In fact, those little notices made me think that maybe there weren't any obituaries for him. 

Then last weekend I found this obituary for him. It confirms that his wife was Nancy Johnson, which I already knew. However, there is one tantalizing detail - he was the justice of the peace in Nixon township for several years, and he was "prominent." That means I can hope to find more newspaper articles about him. 


























For starters, though, I found yet another obituary with even more information:

































































This version adds the information that he was born in Pike County, Illinois. Of interest is that he lived for a brief time in Champaign County, Illinois and was a teacher. This version tells me that in addition to being a justice of the peace, he was also a police magistrate. I should also be searching for him as "Squire Brown." The biggest piece of information, though, is that he was captured and imprisoned at Libby Prison until the close of the Civil War. These bits of information give me lots of new material to research.

This new information prompted me to run a basic google search for John D. Brown of Weldon, Illinois. A little book entitled Honor to Our Heritage, Weldon, Illinois, 1872-1972 by the Illinois Survey turned up with this picture. John Deloss Brown is the fifth from the left.




















Although these are wonderful discoveries, I am left wondering why no one erected a tombstone for John D. Brown when his wife has one in the Nixon Township Cemetery. And I am wondering why there was not an obituary for his wife when she died unless I just have not found it yet. And I have the problem of three different birth years for John D. Brown that have to be sorted out.

Sunday, February 2, 2020

The Galts Move to Appleton City, Missouri

©  Kathy Duncan, 2020

This is the sort of find that makes my heart go pitty-pat. My husband's grandmother, Beulah Frances (Galt) Graham Kinsey was born in Farmingdale, Sangamon County, Illinois. She was the daughter of Thomas Resin Galt and the granddaughter of James Junius Galt. The Galts were well established in Sangamon County, Illinois by the mid-1830s. Beulah told me that they moved to Appleton City, Missouri when she was young, but I had never found any record of them there. I did find her Galt grandparents there, but they were very much on the move in the last half of the nineteenth century. James J. Galt left Sangamon County, Illinois by 1867, and is found on the Otoe County, Nebraska census in 1870. By 1880, he was in Henry County, Missouri. Meanwhile, his son Thomas Reason Galt, who was still living at home with his parents in 1870 and 1880, married in DeWitt County, Illinois in 1890. One year later, Thomas R. Galt was back in Sangamon County, Illinois where daughter Beulah was born in 1891. Evidently, most of James Junius Galt's family was back in Sangamon County at that point. Other newspaper clippings led me to believe that daughter Sarah Rachel (Galt) DeWeese was already in Appleton City, Missouri when James J. Galt and family decided to remove there. At some point, James J. Galt's father-in-law and mother-in-law, Rezin D. and Rachel (Earnest) Brown, also removed to Appleton City, Missouri. Rezin Brown died there in 1887.

Beulah vividly recalled the family's trip by wagon from Appleton City, Missouri, but at the age of two, she would have been too young to remember their journey from Sangamon County, Illinois to Appleton City, Missouri, which this clipping supplies. Such delightful details as loading their livestock and household goods into four boxcars provide an interesting picture of the family.

While the article details that James J. Galt and his family had come to Farmingdale in about 1883, they had been in residence there decades earlier. This clipping details the three unmarried daughters still living at home - Louie, Jennie, and Georgia. The William W. Ingels who moved onto the Galt farm was James J. Galt's son-in-law, who had married daughter Mamie Galt.