Sunday, August 5, 2018

2018 Prompt - Oldest - Barnabas Davis



Barnabas Davis - 1599-1685
10th great grandfather





My oldest ancestor? My oldest is probably my Mayflower descendant Thomas Rogers. But he died the first winter in Plymouth probably in his early 40s. My oldest, longest living, 17th century ancestor would be Barnabus Davis; business man, soldier, tallow chandler and planter.  I descend from Barnabas through my mother’s Martin family. My great-great grandfather Edward Martin married Elizabeth Larkins, daughter of Margaret Davis and then back seven more generations to Barnabus Davis. That would be Michigan to New York to Massachusetts to England.

Three hundred and forty-eight years ago my 10th great grandfather was born in 1599 in Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, England. Tewkesbury is about 100 miles northwest of London.  As a business man Barnabas left many records of his transactions and after 45 years of life in Massachusetts he also created several deed records that help document his life. He married Patience James July 1, 1625 in Tewkesbury, England[i] and died November 28, 1685 in Charlestown, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.[ii] 

Barnabas first came to America in July,1635 on the ship “Blessing” on a business trip[iii]. He gave his age then as thirty-six years when he left London. He landed in Boston and walked to Connecticut to check on his employer, Mr. Woodcock’s, business. When he arrived in Connecticut he found that Mr. Woodcock’s employee Francis Stiles had built a house but had not laid out 400 acres for a farm as he should have in his agreement.[iv] Barnabas was advised to return to England with letters concerning Mr. Woodcock’s estate in the colony. After a three-month trip aboard ship he returned to England and delivered the letters. 1635 was in the midst of the Great Migration when hundreds of middle-class educated and skilled English families were choosing to leave their country. 

Barnabas was again sent to the colonies in 1637 to check up on Francis Stiles and landed in Boston in the year of the Pequot War.[v] He traveled to Connecticut in a small sailing vessel and found that Stiles had not acquired the land he should have and was sent back to England with more letters. Before he could leave he was forced to become a soldier for about a year to fight in the Pequot War. The Pequot War was the first major conflict between the English colonists in New England and the native population. The Pequots, who lived in coastal Connecticut, had angered the English by offering sanctuary to Indians who had killed an English trader. The Treaty of Hartford, September 21, 1638,[vi] ended the war, not so much by ceasing hostilities as by dissolving the Pequot tribe.

He was sent to Connecticut a third time to recover the Woodcock’s estate from Stiles. This time Barnabas took his wife and five children with him. I find it hard to believe that business men in the seventeenth century traveled three months aboard a ship to traverse from London to Boston. Barnabas landed in Boston in mid-1639.[vii] The Woodcocks never paid Barnabas and he brought suit against them for wages in 1640-41. He won the suit. Later, he owned Lovell's Island and considerable other real estate. On March 1, 1657/58 when land was divided in Charlestown, Barnabas received lot 50 of 27 acres of woodland and 4.5 acres on the side of common land.[viii]

Barnabas and his wife, Patience, came to New England in 1639 with their five children; Samuel, John, James, Patience and Barnabas and settled in the small town of Charlestown justoutside of Boston. Their last two children, Nathaniel and Hopewell were born in Charlestown.  Here in Charlestown Barnabas practiced the occupation of tallow chandler, or candle maker.[ix] Barnabas died November 27, 1685 in Charlestown[x] and Patience died November 15, 1690 in Charlestown.[xi] 




Nancy Simmons
Josephine Martin
Edward Martin
Francis Martin
Margaret Davis
Joel Davis
Isaac Davis
Isaac Davis
Simon Davis
Samuel Davis
Samuel Davis
Barnabas Davis  10th Grandfather




[i] Anderson, Robert Charles, The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633, Vol 2, Boston: New England Historical and Genealogical Society, 1996-2011, page 288.
[ii] Hotten, John Camden, ed., Original List of Persons of Quality, London 1874, rpt Baltimore 1974, page 108.
[iii] Anderson, page 286.
[iv] Pope, Charles H., Pioneers of Massachusetts 1620-1650, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2013,p 131.
[v] Lechford, Thomas, Note-book kept by Thomas Lechford, Esq., lawyer : in Boston, Massachusetts Bay, from June 27, 1638 to July 29, 1641, American Antiquarian Society, Vol III, 1885, page 367.
[vi] Wikipedia, Treaty of Hartford, (1638), https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Hartford_(1638)
[vii] Anderson, page 286.
[viii] Frothingham, Richard, The History of Charlestown, Massachusetts, Charles Little & James Brown, 1845, p. 152.
[ix] Anderson, page 286.
[x] Ancestry, Massachusetts Town and Vital Records 1620-1988, Barnabas Davis, page 553.
[xi] Anderson, page 288.

2018 Prompt - Colorful - Elizabeth Rice Wilson Strahl



Elizabeth Rice Wilson Strahl – 3rd great grandmother
Elizabeth Rice- William R Wilson- Cora Wilson- June Putman- Paul Simmons- Nancy Simmons



Life can have its dark moments and its colorful ones.  My 3rd great grandmother had some pretty dark days and I believe she had some colorful ones to sustain her for almost 89 years.  One colorful note based on family lore is that Elizabeth Rice Wilson Strahl grew to be an old woman who was affectionally attached to a pet raccoon.   




Elizabeth Rice was born August 26, 1811 in Belmont County, Ohio[1] to Samuel and Rebecca (Souders) Rice.[2]  Just before her tenth birthday in 1822 her father, Samuel Rice,[3] died and her mother remarried Timothy Winchester in 1826. [4]



On March 20, 1834 Elizabeth married John Wilson in Belmont Co., Ohio.[5]  Her first child, my great-great grandfather, William Rice Wilson was born December 13, 1834[6] and two years later her second son, Christopher Columbus Wilson was born. Elizabeth and John also had a son, Emanuel Amos Wilson born February 23, 1841[7] and Thomas Jefferson Wilson was born October 5, 1842.[8]  




Shortly after Elizabeth had her second child her mother, Rebecca Winchester, died. In 1840 her three-year old son died and in 1845 her husband of eleven years died. From 1845 to 1862 Elizabeth lives as a widow and raises her sons in Ohio.  In 1857 her oldest son, William Rice, and youngest son, Thomas Jefferson, move to Illinois where their grandfather, Amos Wilson, had moved and several other relatives and friends.  In the 1860 federal census Elizabeth and her 20-year-old son, Emanuel are still living in Guernsey County, Ohio.

By 1862 Emanuel and Elizabeth moved to Illinois and on April 12, 1862 Elizabeth married Daniel Jacob Strahl. Her son, Thomas Jefferson Wilson, had enlisted with the Illinois 4th Cavalry and she received word just a month before her second marriage that Thomas had died at Fort Donaldson in Tennessee from the measles at the age of nineteen.  Five months later in September 1862 her two remaining sons enlisted in the 125th Illinois Infantry.

Fortunately for Elizabeth, both her sons return home from the war and for the next 10 years Elizabeth and Daniel, her second husband, lived together three miles south of Bismarck. Then on November 16, 1875 Jacob Daniel Strahl died at 80 years of age. 

You would think being overwhelmed with death Elizabeth could easily be forelorn.  But for the next 26 years Elizabeth lives in the small town of Bismarck surrounded by her two sons, many grandchildren and great grandchildren. In 1885, she somehow has a new home, according to the transcription on the back of the picture of her standing in the doorway.  Maybe it was her faith that sustained her through the many years of losing loved ones. According to her obituary, she united with the Christian church in 1853 at Harmony, Ohio and remained with the Christian church till her death.  She attended church regularly and was always willing to help those in need until her own health began to fail. 


Elizabeth passed away at 6:30 Monday morning August 12, 1901 in Bismarck. She had had two sons, 12 grandchildren and nine great grandchildren to grieve her loss.  Her funeral was at the Christian Church in Bismarck and she was buried in Rose Cemetery.  Rose Cemetery, a cemetery with a colorful name for a woman who took the dark days and somehow through her faith, love of family and friends and love of nature added color to sustain herself for 88 years, 11 months and 16 days.

  



[1] Ancestry. 1900 Census Newell, Vermilion, Illinois, ED 89, page 2, line 26, Elizabeth Strahl.
[2] Familysearch. Belmont Co Ohio deeds, film 004021724, p. 24, image 28, Samuel Rice.
[3] ibid
[4] Ancestry. Ohio County Marriages, 1774-1993, p. 44, image 359/517, Timothy Winchester.
[5] Ancestry. Ohio County Marriages, 1774-1993, Belmont 1830-1844, p. 279, John Wison to Elizabeth Rice.
[6] Ancestry. History of Vermilion County, Illinois, Vol II, p. 356.
[7] Ancestry. 1850 Census Jackson, Guernsey, Ohio, page 328A, image 4/30, line 12 Amos Wilson.
[8] Ancestry. 1900 Census Newell, Vermilion, IL, ED 89, page 3B, line 79, Willson, Emanuel.