Showing posts with label Hammond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hammond. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 24, 2018

March 26, 1922 "...you didn't say anything about that little proposition I put up to you..."

Edythe is busy making plans to pack, taking some refresher driving lessons, and seeing a show.





Addressed to:
Mr G Rayson Brown.
1468 East 67th St.,
Chicago,
Ill.

From:
408 Marcy St.,
Ottawa, Ill.

Transcription:
Ottawa, Ill.
Mar. 26- 22.

Dear Rayson:

Your dear letter received and was glad to hear from you, but just couldn't seem to get down to writting letters. Haven't written to Vera either but must do so soon.

Aunt went out in the country for dinner today and Mother and I have been here all alone all day. I have not been feeling well, sort of a sick headache but will be allright in the morning, I guess.

Well I only have five more days to work and then for a much needed vacation. I think about next Saturday I will get out the car and see I can climb a telophone pole or do some thing else foolish. One of the boys who used to work at the office is going to teach me, I am afraid I have forgotten all I ever knew about it. Mother and I are going to try to drive to Chicago the sixteenth and we are going to expect you here then Rayson on the twenty third so please mark your calendar accordingly.

Yesterday it rained very hard here and was still raining last night so I did not go down town to do any shopping. I did want to go to town too mostly to get Vera a little hat like mine. They are felt and just the thing for traveling, to keep off the dust.

By the way Rayson you didn't say anything about that little proposition I put up to you about going west.

Next week I will see about packing my victrola and cedar chest. In all we will have three boxes and a couple of trunks containing clothes. I am anxious to get to packing. There is so much to do.

I am patiently waiting for the photograph but surely hope it will come before next Xmas. You didn't say in which uniform you had them taken. Do you like the photo Vera has of me? They are really the best of the two kinds.

I'll bet you had a good time in Hammond. Your callender is pretty well filled.

Irene Cole and I went to the Crescent the other night to see "Over the Hill". It is an awfully sad play. We sat and cried all the way through it. I suppose you saw it there about a year ago. We always get them so long afterwards.

Well Rayson I know this is not much of a letter but please excuse me this time and I will try and do better next time. Write soon.

Lovingly,
Edythe.

Friday, September 15, 2017

Cordelia Francis (Hammond) Nicholas Dye (1877-1970)

Cordelia Francis Hammond was my 2nd great-grandmother. She died when I was 4 years old and I have no memory of her. I asked my great aunt Velma, Cordelia's granddaughter, to tell me about her grandma. Aunt Velma wrote the following and mailed it to me several years ago:

Cordia was daughter of Thomas & Martha Hawkins Hammonds. Cordelia Francis Hammond (nicknamed Cordia) was born March 5, 1877 - passed away June 7, 1970 she was 93 years old, plus three months & two days. She was married at Pouhatan, Arkansas to David Lincoln Nicholas. She later married Joseph Dye at West Plains, Mo. She was born in Howell County, Mo. Cordia & Joseph Dye lived at Koshkonong, Mo. 18 miles east of West Plains, Mo. on 63 Highway, she lived with my mother in Kansas City her last few years until she got where she couldn't take care of her. She died in a nursing home in Independence, Mo. a suburb of Kansas City, Mo. Cordia had one brother Willie Hammonds lived at Sturkie, Arkansas, one sister Gracie Lemmons of Phoenix, Arizona. 10 grandchildren, four step-grand kids, 28 great grandchildren, & 16  great great grandchildren.
Cordia and Joseph are buried in Koshknong, Mo. Cemetery. We go Decorate their graves every year. Cordia was a nurse during the war, she put a string of asfidity around her neck & never did get a disease. They lived close to Railroad Tracks in Koshkonong. I used to visit when I was a child, I would run hide every time a train came by. When she lived at my mothers she had to have peaches for supper every night. Grandpa Dye had a Service Station in Koshkonong. He was married before, then his wife died. Her picture is hanging in Bobs front room. Joseph Dye died in 1956. I don't know much about Grandpa Dye but he was a great man. We loved him.

Cordia Hammonds & Dave Nicholas got married but I don't know when. They had 4 daughters Belle, Hattie & Beulah. They had a small daughter to die, I didn't know her name.


Researching Cordelia, I found that most of what Velma wrote was accurate. I enjoyed the little extras, like the peaches for supper. Cordia was living with her daughter Hattie Cobb, who happened to grow and can the best peaches ever, so no wonder she wanted them each evening. 

My favorite photo of Cordia. It's an undated postcard print.

The first evidence I can find of Cordia is in the 1880 census. She was listed with her family in South Fork Township, Howell County, Missouri. The birthdates and birthplaces of the children tell us that the family came to Howell County between 1875 (a daughter's birth in Arkansas) and 1877 (Cordia's birth in Missouri).

The 1890 census records were destroyed in a fire, so that year isn't available to use for documenting the family.  I do know that Thomas and Martha had additional children after 1880. Siblings Willie and Grace were listed in Cordia's obituary and I found records for children born as late as 1897.

I found Cordia's marriage record in 1893 to David Lincoln Nicholas. It's difficult to read, but interesting to note they were under the age of eighteen and their fathers both had to consent to the marriage. They are listed as living in Moody, Howell County, Missouri.

Ancestry.com, Missouri Marriage Records, 1805-2002, Image 259/280, accessed 14 Sep 2017.
I haven't been able to locate Cordia and David in the 1900 census. I need to take some time and look through the images page by page because it's possible the name was hard to read and they were indexed incorrectly. I found them in 1910 on the census records living next door to Cordia's oldest brother John and his family in Washington, Fulton, Arkansas. It was here that their daughters were born. 
  • Nora Belle Nicholas was born on April 3, 1897 (married David Ward)
  • Hattie Eugene Nicholas was born on June 3, 1899
  • Beulah M. Nicholas was born on October 9, 1901 (married Walter Wallace)
  • and that infant daughter Aunt Velma mentioned was born and died before 1910. She is sort of listed on this census. It asks how many children the mother has had (4) and how many are living (3).
The family was still in Washington, Fulton, Arkansas in 1920, though Hattie was the only child still at home. The two older daughters had married and started their own families. Daughter Beulah and her husband were living right next door. Hattie followed suit soon after, when she married Henry Clay "Kay" Cobb in 1921. Aunt Velma mentioned in her notes that Cordia was a nurse during the war. Because of her age, I assume World War I, though I really don't know. If that's the case, she may have been out of the house for some of the time right before this census. I had never heard of "asfidity" so I had to look it up. I found this blog post that explains the folk remedy. Apparently people believed that wearing certain herbs would ward off the flu, polio, and other illnesses. The herbs were kept in a bag that was either pinned inside the clothes or worn on a string around the neck. So now we all know.


Sometime between 1920 and 1923, Cordia and David Nicholas were divorced. No one alive seems to know why. In 1923, Cordia married Joseph Dye, a widow seventeen years her senior. His first wife had died young and he had her portrait made for $300, so the story goes. Cordia wouldn't allow it to hang in their home, so he hung it in his office. Like my aunt Velma mentioned, the portrait now hangs in the living room at Bobby Cobb's home in central Missouri. I photographed it when I was there to visit in July. It has a big elaborate frame that I sadly didn't capture in my picture. $300 back then, in rural Missouri, was a bunch of cash to spend on a wall portrait. It's really spectacular. Uncle Bob said his Grandpa Dye wanted to be sure that the portrait was always taken care of and hung where it could be seen. Uncle Bob promised he would see to it. Even though she was not a blood relation, it's a sweet love story and a promise is a promise.

Portrait of  Sarah Rainwater Dye, 1st wife of Joseph Dye, as it hangs in the home of Bobby Cobb.

While at my Uncle Bob's this summer, he also brought out an envelope with a handwritten note documenting the marriage of Cordia and Joseph along with their marriage certificate. I just had my phone, which was almost dead, so I quickly snapped a photo of the note before it died completely (see below). Cordia and Joe lived in Koshkonong, Missouri, a little town along the highway. Velma said Joe owned a service station. Uncle Bob remembers that he had a business of some kind and that's where Sarah's portrait was kept. In 1930, on the census, they were recorded living on Luyster Street and he was a "buyer" of "ties". Railroad ties? I looked at a map and Luyster is a long street that intersects with Hwy 63. The railroad runs closest to the street on the highway end of Luyster. Aunt Velma remembers the scary trains, so their farm must of been in that area.

"J. F. Dye and Corda F. Hammond was married April 25 (27 is written below 25) 1923"
Handwritten note possessed by Bobby Cobb, unknown by whom written.
Cordia was widowed in 1944 when her husband Joseph Dye passed. She lived until 1970 and from what I understand was quite eccentric. My mom and her sister both recall going to visit at their great-grandma Cordia's home, but they weren't permitted in the house. They would wait on the front steps where they were allowed to eat grapes from the vines that grew there. Another vivid memory was the view inside her home from the front door. In her later years, Cordia became what we know now as a "hoarder". She didn't throw things away and from her front door all one could see was a narrow path down a hall. Things, papers and magazines and who knows what, were stacked along both walls. When my mom told me the story, she said it was a good thing that house never caught fire.

Later, when she was unable to care for herself, Cordia went to live with her daughter Hattie. Cordia was a quiet woman. In fact, my aunt doesn't remember ever hearing her great-grandmother speak. Sadly, she was just kind of in the background. Peaches, however, was something my aunt did remember. She thinks Cordia had a bowl of Hattie's peaches at every meal!

5 generations - Cordia Dye, Hattie Cobb, LeRoy Cobb, Louise Cavanaugh & Shannon Cavanaugh (me).
Taken in Kansas City at Hattie's home in 1967. 

Cordia died in 1970 in Independence, Missouri. I think Aunt Velma may have copied some of the information she sent me from this funeral card as it matches up with her note (above), even the error in death year for Joseph Dye.
Obituary from the back of Cordia's funeral card.

Cordia Dye's funeral card .
Pallbearers at Cordia's funeral were grandsons J. D. Cobb, Bobby Cobb and Roy Cobb (Hattie's sons), Wayman Womack (husband of Hattie's daughter Velma), Jewell Ward (Belle's son), Gary Proffitt (husband of Belle's daughter Virginia), and T. J. Waters (husband of Beulah's daughter Imogene).

The grave of Cordia, not Pauline, and Joseph Dye in Koshkonong Cemetery, Koshkonong, MO.
Photo taken July 2017.
I know this is the grave of Cordia and Joseph Dye. The dates are her birth and death date. Joseph's dates are correct. It's the grave Aunt Velma decorated every year in Koshkonong. I haven't figured out for sure where the name Pauline comes from. I have an idea, though. I scribbled the name Cordia...

Cordia, scribbled, could maybe be mistaken for Pauline...

...and I think I can see how maybe if the name was sloppily written it might have been mistaken for Pauline by the cemetery. I don't have a copy of Cordia's death certificate. It won't be available online until 2020 as Missouri makes digital copies available 50 years after death, so we can look at it then and see if my theory pans out!

Thursday, May 19, 2016

Hattie Eugene (Nicholas) Cobb (1899-1977)

My mother’s paternal grandmother was Hattie Eugene (Nicholas) Cobb. I was a pre-teen girl when she passed away and remember many fun times spent at her home in Kansas City, Missouri in the 1970s.

Hattie Cobb in the early 1970s.
Photo from my personal collection.

Hattie was born on 3 June 1899 in Missouri. Her oldest daughter told me once that her birthplace was Marquad, Madison County, Missouri, according to an entry in a family bible. Her parents were David Lincoln Nicholas (1874-1961) and Cordelia “Cordia” Francis Hammond (1877-1970). Hattie was one of four daughters born to the couple, though one died as an infant. Her sister, Nora Belle (called Belle), was born in 1897 and younger sister Beulah came in 1903. Both of those sisters were born in Arkansas.
In the 1910 census, Hattie is living with her family in Washington, Fulton County, Arkansas. In the home next door was her mother’s brother John Hammond and his family, with several cousins near Hattie’s age. The Nicholas and Hammond children, along with a few other neighbors, attended a small school together. I believe the following photo was taken between 1912 and 1915; Hattie is holding the sign that reads “Grammar School”. I think Beulah is to her right and Belle to her left, but I’m not certain.

 "Grammar School" probably taken in Washington, Fulton, Arkansas about 1912-15. Hattie is the girl holding the sign. Photo from my personal collection.


In 1920, the family is still in the same home, but sister Beulah and her husband, Walter Wallace, were living in the neighboring home. Soon Hattie would also marry, walking down the aisle with Henry Clay “Kay” Cobb on 5 February 1921. By December of that first year of marriage, the Cobbs were in West Plains, Howell County, Missouri, welcoming daughter Velma Love. Son John David arrived in 1923, Leroy in 1927, Bobby Clay in 1929, and the baby Vera in 1933. They lived about 5 miles south of West Plains on the old Cobb farm that Kay’s parents owned before them.
Several years ago, Velma wrote out some of her early memories for me in a letter. This is an excerpt about her childhood, “One of the most scary things I can remember is we had a Tornado when we lived in the 2 room house at West Plains. It blowed our chicken house away, blowed our orchard up by roots, tree on the house, blowed window lights out, we got under the bed. None of us got hurt. J.D. was 11 years old he was praying. When I was growing up my mother would buy enough flour with the same pattern & make me a dress, tablecloths & sheets & curtains. My brother and I used to take a basket of eggs, walk to the country store & exchange them for things we needed. We used to walk three miles to church & three miles back. My dad never owned a car. He had 2 mules and a wagon. It took them all day to go to town and buy groceries. We had kerosene lamps. I used orange crates to nail on the wall to put dishes in. We made curtains [for the crates] out of flour sacks.”
Hattie’s parent's marriage ended in divorce. Her mother remarried by 1923. Cordia’s new husband, Joseph Dye, was a widow. The children all adored him as a grandfather. The Dyes had a home in Koshkonong (18 miles East of West Plains) near the railroad tracks. Hattie’s father remarried in 1932. David and his wife Gainie lived in Fulton County, Arkansas.

Left to right; Hattie, her daughter Vera, son J.D., son Bobby, son Leroy and unknown boy. Photo taken about 1939, from my personal collection.


The 1930 census lists the family in Howell, Howell, Missouri on West Plains and Lanton Road. This would be the old Cobb Farm. They moved in about 1934 to the Spring Creek community, also in Howell County, into a larger home to accommodate the family. Kay was still farming.  Soon after daughter Velma married Wayman Womack in 1939, she and her husband moved to Kansas City where he was employed at the Bomber plant before he joined the Army. Kay came to Kansas City to work at the plant, too, while Hattie stayed back until she sold the farm and then moved up with the younger kids. Hattie’s two oldest sons, J.D. and LeRoy, were both in the service during WWII along with her son-in-law Wayman. I’m sure there was a lot of worry on her mind until all three were home safe. After the war, when Kay’s job at the plant ended, he worked as a plumber before retiring. Hattie worked for a time in a Made-Rite sandwich shop. The couple also had a small farm on the property and sold some produce for extra income. The grandkids were sometimes recruited to peddle the fruit and vegetables. My mother hated doing it, but enjoyed the time in the summer with her cousins at Grandma and Grandpa Cobb’s house.

Hattie holding her granddaughter Louise in 1947.
Photo from my personal collection.

Kay died at home in 1968. Hattie remained there until she died in 1977. They are buried in Howell Memorial Park Cemetery near West Plains, Missouri.

Five Generations. Unknown what paper this was in. I'm the child on my mother's lap.
From my personal collection.


Every summer when I was a little girl I remember picnics at Great Grandma Cobb’s house. Big quilts laid out on the ground with watermelons holding them in place, picnic tables, searing hot metal lawn chairs, and cousins having a lot of fun. There were peach trees and tomato plants that we could pick from and eat if we wanted to. Often the women would be in the tiny kitchen canning peaches, a family favorite. Great Grandma Cobb always wore an apron when she was cooking and she made some fantastic food in that little kitchen. When I entertain, it's her example that I follow. Nothing fancy, just bring as much family together as you can, as often as you can, and the good times just naturally happen.
Setting up for a picnic in the early 1970s at Hattie's house in Kansas City, Missouri.
Photo from my personal collection.