Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Duffield/Sisson Postcards No. 27

Next in the series of postcards from 1908-1914 is No. 27, View of Beach and Pier, Highland Park, Grand Haven, Mich. These postcards were discovered last year in the Sierra Madre, California home of Warren Brown after his death. They were saved by his maternal grandparents, Edith Amy Duffield (1864-1926) and Charles Herman Sisson (1868-1927), and passed down to Warren, my husband’s cousin. Charles and Edith were married in Ottawa, Illinois in 1895 and remained there until the early 1920s when they moved west to Los Angeles, California. 

View of Beach and Pier, Highland Park, Grand Haven, Mich.

Postmarked 27 Jun 1910, Railway Mail Service.

This is an unusual postmark because it wasn't stamped at a traditional post office. The RMS stamp next to the date stamp signifies "Railway Mail Service". The RMS was a separate department of the US Post Office, operating on a passenger train in a designated car. Mail was sorted en route to the destination, receiving a cancellation the same as it would have at a Post Office. "TR. 7", under the date, may have been the train number, or route number, and the lettering around the cancellation probably denoted the route or name of railroad. I looked around to see if I could match up the part of the stamp we can see, but it will take some more research to nail it down.

Addressed to:
Mrs. Chas. Sisson.
Marcy St.
Ottawa,
Ill.


Message:
Dear Friend,
Having a 
swell. did
not get sick
at all. Lovingly
C. M. S.


The initials and handwriting identified the sender of this card as Carrie Stiles. She mailed several other postcards to Edith and it seems they were good friends. Perhaps Carrie was concerned about motion sickness on the train, but thankfully there was none of that. The beaches in Michigan were popular vacation destinations in the summer. It's not known if Carrie was on her way there, or on her way back, but she was having a swell [time]. 

The image below is a modern one of the lighthouse on the end of the pier as found on Wikipedia. It looks much the same as it did in 1910 and is still very busy with beach-going vacationers every summer.



Duffield/Sisson Postcards No. 26

Next in the series of postcards from 1908-1914 is No. 26, Scene on Fox River, Aurora, Ill. These postcards were discovered last year in the Sierra Madre, California home of Warren Brown after his death. They were saved by his maternal grandparents, Edith Amy Duffield (1864-1926) and Charles Herman Sisson (1868-1927), and passed down to Warren, my husband’s cousin. Charles and Edith were married in Ottawa, Illinois in 1895 and remained there until the early 1920s when they moved west to Los Angeles, California. 



Scene on Fox River, Aurora, Ill. No. 4219


Postmarked in Aurora, Ill. 22 Apr 1910
Addressed to:

Mrs. Charles Sisson
Ottawa
Illinois
408 Marcy St.

Message:

I got your card yesterday 
will come down as soon as
I can. Lyles' mother is taking
care of things for me to-day
and I guess we won't get
home till to-morrow we are going to
Chicago. -Eva.

Eva Grace Duffield, younger sister to Edith, married Lyle Green in 1908. They rented and worked a dairy farm in Dayton, LaSalle County. Dayton isn't far from Ottawa, less than 10 miles, but the time it would take to travel anywhere would mean doing as Eva did here, having someone else come over to take care of the chores. Farm work, especially on a dairy farm, isn't an easy thing to get away from even today. Not only did the cows have to be milked every single day, but it's likely that there were other farm animals requiring daily care. 

Eva mailed this card from Aurora, a town about halfway between her home in Dayton and Chicago. The train to Chicago would have taken them through Aurora. It seems that they stopped at least for a rest and maybe a meal, certainly long enough to purchase and post a card. The Fox River, pictured on the postcard, was a familiar one to both Eva and Edith. It continued past Aurora into LaSalle County, bordered Dayton and met the Illinois River at Ottawa. The familiar river and cows to remind her of home may have guided Eva's choice of this particular card to send her sister.

Monday, September 5, 2016

John Levi Curtis (1873-1922)

At six years old, John Levi Curtis was fatherless and may have also been abandoned by his mother. Thanks to extended family, he didn't have to grow up alone. Tragedy struck again, though, when he died and left his own children orphaned. Thankfully, extended family was there once more  to help. John was my husband's great grandfather. This is his story.

John Levi Curtis was born on May 5, 1873 in Turman, Sullivan, Indiana to William G. Curtis and Sarah E. (Merrill) Curtis. He had two older sisters; Naomi Evaline born about 1869 and Loucretia E. born about 1871. A younger brother, Gilbert W., came along in September of 1878. Just a few months later, in March of 1879, their father,William, died. Gilbert followed his father to the grave in August that year. Losing her husband and infant son must have been devastating for Sarah. Her brother-in-law, Gilbert Curtis, assisted her with settling William's estate. There wasn't much to settle. A horse, a heifer, a milk cow, some chickens and a few pigs for livestock, about 5 acres in wheat, a plow, a shovel, a post auger, and miscellaneous other tools and household goods were the only items to account for. The total value was less than $500. There was some family still in the area, but Sarah's mother and several siblings had moved to Kansas. After her baby son died, she may have felt very alone.

In 1880, little John Levi, at just seven years old, was the only one of the four remaining family members found in the federal census. He was boarding with an older couple, Cyrus and Almira Thomas in Turman, Sullivan, Indiana. This little boy had just experienced the trauma of losing his father and little brother, and then faced living without his mother and sisters. I searched in Indiana and in Kansas for Sarah and the girls, but haven't yet found them on a census listing anywhere.

Sarah reappeared in the records when she married Moses J. Bland on January 19, 1882 in Sullivan County, Indiana. She and Moses had a daughter, Mariah two years later. Then, in 1886, it's believed that Sarah died. It is possible that John was back with his mother between the years of 1880 and her death, but it's not known for certain. The next records found were marriage records for his two older sisters who were both wed in 1890.

By the time the census came out in 1900, John was living with his Aunt Martha, his mother's youngest sister, and her husband, Isaac Robertson, in Joplin, Jasper, Missouri.  He was 27 years old, single, and working as a house carpenter. A few years later, he was back in Kansas, where he fell in love  with Minnie Jane Altum. Minnie and John were married in 1904 and set up housekeeping in Whitewater, Butler, Kansas. Daughter Lucretia was born in 1905, followed close after by a move to Parsons, Labette, Kansas, near where John's older sister Loucretia was living. John was a painter in Parsons, working for the MK&T (an acronym for Missouri, Kansas and Texas) Railroad. This railroad was often called the K-T, or Katy, railroad. A son, Levi Roy, was born in Parsons in 1907.

John and Minnie relocated to Amarillo, Texas after Levi was born, possibly taking the very train system that had employed him in Kansas. Their family continued to grow, with daughter Bessie born about 1908. Also living with them in 1910 were an uncle, a cousin, and his nephew Ray Galvin, the son of John's sister Naomi. John was now his own boss, working as a painting contractor. In 1916, Minnie gave birth to another daughter, Billie. John was busy, working hard and caring for his family. Life was good in Texas. But it was about to change.

Two years later, during another pregnancy, Minnie developed toxemia and suddenly died. The child was pre-term and did not survive. John, now a widower, was left to care for the remaining four children. When he was required to register for the WWI draft in 1918 he was disqualified, not because of a disability, but probably because he was a single parent. In that draft registration he is described as tall and slender, with brown hair and brown eyes. 

John and his children were still in Amarillo, Texas in 1920 where the bad luck for the family continues. About this time, John began to suffer from an illness. Two years later, sadly, he died. The cause of death was Uremia, or kidney failure, caused by Bright's Disease. His children were now orphans. Loucretia was 16, Levi Roy was 15, Bessie was 13, and little Billie just 5 years old. After their father died, the kids were shipped back to Kansas to live with Aunt Loucretia.

Llano Cemetery, Amarillo, Texas.
Photo from FindaGrave.com, Memorial #17652599, Memorial and photo added by Walter Dunn. 

Loucretia and her husband made arrangements to adopt Billie and they raised her as their own. By 1930, they had moved farther west, settling in Los Angeles, California. Roy and Bessie were still with their Aunt and Uncle. Their older sister had recently married, but was living nearby. It appears that these siblings remained in close proximity to each other for the rest of their lives.

Levi Roy, or Roy as he was called, and Vera (Sisson) Armstrong were briefly married and their daughter, Lora, is my mother-in-law.  The pattern of father-less children, for one reason or another, continued into her generation. Because of her parent's nasty split, Lora never knew her father. She's never even seen a photograph of him. And, like her father and grandfather, she spent much of her youth being raised by extended family. I'm currently searching for descendants of Roy and/or his sisters who might be able to fill in some of the missing details. Lora would be interested in learning more about her father and his family.